This blog collects information about income inequality and places it – available to anyone interested – with alphabetical reference, on this specifically linked, Internet-accessible-and-searchable blog database, access to which is free and unrestricted. Search by keyword, i.e., Smith, poverty, using Microsoft Command f.
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Gateway to
Sources and Information About Income Inequality in the United States
Millions
of Americans are working longer hours for lower wages, and yet almost all of
the new income and wealth being created is going to the top one percent. While
the top one percent have seen their incomes rise 18 percent over the past
decade, those in the middle have actually seen their incomes fall.
“35 soul-crushing facts about
American income inequality,”
Posted on salon, JULy 15, 2015, at 01:15 P.M. (EDT)
Larry Schwartz, Alternet
“The money given
out in Wall Street bonuses last year was twice the amount all minimum-wage
workers earned combined.”
This article originally appeared on www.alternet.
“While Hillary Clinton occasionally gives some lip service to the problem of extreme inequality,
[Senator] Bernie Sanders is the only candidate really hammering away at it. He has even
blasted the orthodoxy of economic growth for its own sake, saying according
to Monday’s [July 13, 2015] Washington
Post that unless economic spoils can be redistributed to make
more Americans’ lives better, all the growth will go to the top 1% anyway, so
who needs it? Sanders might know his history, but the rest of the
candidates could use a little primer.
“The United States was not always the most powerful nation on
Earth. It was only with the end of World War II, with the rest of the developed
world in smoldering ruins, that America emerged as the free world’s leader.
This coincided with the expansion of the U.S. middle
class. With the other war combatants
trying to recover from the destruction of the war, America became the
supermarket, hardware store and auto dealership to the world. Markets for
American products abounded and opportunity was everywhere for American workers
of all economic means to get ahead. America had a virtual monopoly on
rebuilding the world. Combined with the G.I. Bill of
1944, which provided money for
returning veterans to go to college, and government loans to buy houses and
start businesses, the middle class in America boomed, as did American power,
wealth and prestige. Between 1946 and
1973, productivity in
America grew by 104 percent. Unions led the way in assuring wages for workers grew by an equal
amount.
“The 1970s, however, brought a screeching halt to the expansion of the
American middle class. The Arab oil embargo in 1973 marked the end of cheap oil and the beginning of the middle-class decline. The Iranian Revolution in 1979, with more resultant oil
instability, combined with the rise of Ronald
Reagan’s conservative revolution at home,
accelerated the long and painful contraction
of the middle class. Cuts in corporate taxes, stagnant worker wage growth, the
right-wing war on unions, and corporate outsourcing
of work overseas greased the wheels of the middle-class decline and the
upper-class elevation. Cuts in taxes on the wealthy, under the guise of
trickle-down economics, have resulted in lower government revenue and cuts to
all kinds of services. All of which has led to today, an era of national and
international inequality unparalleled since the days of the Roaring ’20s.
Here are 35 astounding facts about inequality that
will fry your brain.
1. In 81 percent of American counties, the median income, about $52,000, is less than it
was 15 years ago.
This is despite the fact that the economy has
grown 83 percent in the past quarter-century and corporate profits have doubled.
American workers produce twice the amount of goods and services as 25 years
ago, but get less of the pie.
2. The amount of money that was given out in bonuses on Wall Street last year
is twice the amount all minimum-wage workers earned
in the country combined.
3. The wealthiest 85 people on
the planet have more money that the poorest 3.5
billion people combined.
4. The average wealth of an American adult is in the range of
$250,000-$300,000. But that average number includes incomprehensibly wealthy
people like Bill Gates. Imagine 10 people in a bar. When Bill Gates walks in,
the average wealth in the bar increases unbelievably, but that number doesn’t
make the other 10 people in the bar richer. The median per adult number is only
about $39,000, placing the U.S. about 27th among
the world’s nations, behind Australia, most of Europe and even small countries
like New Zealand, Ireland and Kuwait.
5. Italians, Belgians and Japanese citizens are wealthier than
Americans.
6. The poorest half of the Earth’s population owns 1% of the Earth’s wealth. The
richest 1% of the Earth’s population owns 46% of
the Earth’s wealth.
7. More locally, the poorest half
of the US owns 2.5% of the country’s wealth.
The top 1% owns 35% of
it.
8. Inequality is a worldwide problem. In the UK,
doctors no longer occupy a place in the top 1% of income earners, London plays
host to the largest congregation of Russian millionaires outside of Moscow, and
also houses more ultra-rich people (defined as owning more than $30 million in
assets outside of their home) than anywhere else on Earth.
9. The slice of the national income pie going to the wealthiest 1% of Americans
has doubled since
1979.
10. The 1% also takes home 20% of the income.
This figure is the most since the 1920s era of laissez faire government (under Republicans Warren
Harding, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover).
11. The super rich .01% of America, such as Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, take home a whopping 6% of the national income, earning around
$23 million a year. Compare that to the average $30,000
a year earned by the bottom 90 percent of
America.
12. The top 1% of
America owns 50% of investment assets (stocks, bonds, mutual funds). The poorest half of America owns
just .5% of the investments.
13. The poorest Americans do come out ahead in one statistic: the bottom 90% of
America owns 73% of the debt.
14. Tax rates for
the middle class have remained essentially unchanged
since 1960. Tax rates on the highest earning Americans have plunged from an almost 70% tax rate
in 1945 down to around 35% today. Corporate tax rates have dropped from 30
percent in the 1950s to under 10 percent today.
15. Since 1990, CEO compensation has
increased by 300%. Corporate profits have doubled. The average worker’s
salary has increased 4%. Adjusted for inflation, the
minimum wage has actually decreased.
16. CEOs in 1965 earned about 24 times the amount of
the average worker. In 1980 they earned 42 times as
much. Today, CEOs earn 325 times the average worker.
18. In a study of 34 developed countries, the United States had the second highest level of income inequality, ahead of only Chile.
19. Young people in the U.S. are getting
poorer. The median wealth of
people under 35 has dropped 68% since 1984. The median wealth of older
Americans has increased 42%.
20. The average white American’s median
wealth is 20 times higher ($113,000) than the average African American ($5,600) and 18 times the Hispanic American ($6,300).
21. America’s highest
incomeinequality is
located in the states surrounding Wall Street (New
York City) and the oil-rich states.
22. Since 1979, high school
dropouts have seen median weekly
income drop by 22 percent. Ethnically,
the highest dropout rates are among Hispanic and African American children.
23. In 1970, a woman earned about 60% of the amount a man
earned. In 2005 a woman earned about 80% of
what a man earned. Since 2005, there has been
no change in that figure. African-American women earn just 64% of
what a white male earns, and Hispanic women just 56%.
24. Over 20 percent of all American
children live below the poverty line. This rate is
higher than almost all other developed countries.
25. Union membership in the US is at an all-time low,
about 11% of the workforce. In 1978, 40 percent of blue-collar workers were
unionized. With that declining influence has come a concurrent decline in the
real value of the minimum wage.
26. Four hundred Americans have more wealth, $2 trillion, than half of all Americans combined.
That is approximately the GDP of Russia.
27. In 1946, a child born into poverty had about a 50 percent chance of scaling the income ladder into
the middle class. In 1980, the chances were 40 percent. A child born today has about a 33 percent chance.
28. Despite massive tax cuts, corporations have not created new jobs in
America. The job creators have been small new businesses that have not enjoyed
the same huge tax breaks.
29. More than half of the members of the United States Congress, where laws are passed deciding how millionaires are taxed,
are millionaires.
30. Twenty five of the largest corporations in
America in 2010 paid their CEOs more money than they paid in taxes that year.
31. In the first decade of the 21st
century, the U.S. borrowed $1 trillion in order to give tax cuts to households earning over $250,000.
32. In 1970, there were five registered lobbyists working
on behalf of wealthy corporations for every one of the 535 members of Congress.
Today there are 22 lobbyists per congressperson.
33. In 1962, the 1% household median wealth was 125 times the
average median wealth. In 2010 the divide was 288
times.
34. During the Great
Recession, the average wealth of the 1% dropped about 16
percent. Meanwhile the wealth of
the 99% dropped 47 percent.
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