|

Here
Are the Stats to Prove it.
The 22 statistics detailed here
prove beyond a shadow of a doubt
that the middle class is being
systematically wiped out of
existence in America. The rich are
getting richer and the poor are
getting poorer at a staggering rate.
Once upon a time, the United States
had the largest and most prosperous
middle class in the history of the
world, but now that is changing at a
blinding pace. So why are we
witnessing such fundamental changes?
Well, the globalism and "free trade"
that our politicians and business
leaders insisted would be so good
for us have had some rather nasty
side effects. It turns out that they
didn't tell us that the "global
economy" would mean that middle
class American workers would
eventually have to directly compete
for jobs with people on the other
side of the world where there is no
minimum wage and very few
regulations.
The big global corporations
have greatly benefited by exploiting
third world labor pools over the
last several decades, but middle
class American workers have
increasingly found things to be very
tough. Here are the statistics to
prove it:
• 83 percent of all U.S.
stocks are in the hands of 1 percent
of the people.
• 61 percent of Americans
"always or usually" live paycheck to
paycheck, which was up from 49
percent in 2008 and 43 percent in
2007.
• 66 percent of the income
growth between 2001 and 2007 went to
the top 1% of all Americans.
• 36 percent of Americans
say that they don't contribute
anything to retirement savings.
• A staggering 43 percent of
Americans have less than $10,000
saved up for retirement.
• 24 percent of American
workers say that they have postponed
their planned retirement age in the
past year.
• Over 1.4 million Americans
filed for personal bankruptcy in
2009, which represented a 32 percent
increase over 2008. • Only the top 5
percent of U.S. households have
earned enough additional income to
match the rise in housing costs
since 1975.
• For the first time in U.S.
history, banks own a greater share
of residential housing net worth in
the United States than all
individual Americans put together.
• In 1950, the ratio of the
average executive's paycheck to the
average worker's paycheck was about
30 to 1. Since the year 2000, that
ratio has exploded to between 300 to
500 to one.
• As of 2007, the bottom 80
percent of American households held
about 7% of the liquid financial
assets.
• The bottom 50 percent of
income earners in the United States
now collectively own less than 1
percent of the nation’s wealth.
• Average Wall Street
bonuses for 2009 were up 17 percent
when compared with 2008.
• In the United States, the
average federal worker now earns 60%
MORE than the average worker in the
private sector.
• The top 1 percent of U.S.
households own nearly twice as much
of America's corporate wealth as
they did just 15 years ago.
• In America today, the
average time needed to find a job
has risen to a record 35.2 weeks.
• More than 40 percent of
Americans who actually are employed
are now working in service jobs,
which are often very low paying.
• or the first time in U.S.
history, more than 40 million
Americans are on food stamps, and
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
projects that number will go up to
43 million Americans in 2011.
• This is what American
workers now must compete against: in
China a garment worker makes
approximately 86 cents an hour and
in Cambodia a garment worker makes
approximately 22 cents an hour.
• Approximately 21 percent
of all children in the United States
are living below the poverty line in
2010 - the highest rate in 20 years.
• Despite the financial
crisis, the number of millionaires
in the United States rose a whopping
16 percent to 7.8 million in 2009.
• The top 10 percent of
Americans now earn around 50 percent
of our national income. Giant
Sucking Sound The reality is that no
matter how smart, how strong, how
educated or how hard working
American workers are, they just
cannot compete with people who are
desperate to put in 10 to 12 hour
days at less than a dollar an hour
on the other side of the world.
After all, what corporation
in their right mind is going to pay
an American worker 10 times more
(plus benefits) to do the same job?
The world is fundamentally
changing. Wealth and power are
rapidly becoming concentrated at the
top and the big global corporations
are making massive amounts of money.
Meanwhile, the American middle class
is being systematically wiped out of
existence as U.S. workers are slowly
being merged into the new "global"
labor pool. What do most Americans
have to offer in the marketplace
other than their labor? Not much.
The truth is that most
Americans are absolutely dependent
on someone else giving them a job.
But today, U.S. workers are "less
attractive" than ever. Compared to
the rest of the world, American
workers are extremely expensive, and
the government keeps passing more
rules and regulations seemingly on a
monthly basis that makes it even
more difficult to conduct business
in the United States. So
corporations are moving operations
out of the U.S. at breathtaking
speed.
Since the U.S. government
does not penalize them for doing so,
there really is no incentive for
them to stay. What has developed is
a situation where the people at the
top are doing quite well, while most
Americans are finding it
increasingly difficult to make it.
There are now about six unemployed
Americans for every new job opening
in the United States, and the number
of "chronically unemployed" is
absolutely soaring. There simply are
not nearly enough jobs for everyone.
Many of those who are able
to get jobs are finding that they
are making less money than they used
to. In fact, an increasingly large
percentage of Americans are working
at low wage retail and service jobs.
But you can't raise a family on what
you make flipping burgers at
McDonald's or on what you bring in
from greeting customers down at the
local Wal-Mart. The truth is that
the middle class in America is dying
-- and once it is gone it will be
incredibly difficult to rebuild.
Update:
Two
recessions, a couple of
market crashes, and
stubbornly high unemployment
are all wreaking havoc on
America's middle class.
In a interview, the state of the
middle class with Sherle
Schwenninger, director of
economic growth and American
strategy programs at the
New
America Foundation.
Schwenninger's recent report
"The
American Middle Class Under
Stress"
has some stunning facts that
highlight the struggles the
average American is having
getting a decent-paying job
and keeping up with rising
cost of living.
Here are
just some of the sobering
facts:
-- There
are 8.5 million people
receiving unemployment
insurance and over 40
million receiving food
stamps.
-- At the
current pace of job
creation, the economy won't
return to full employment
until 2018.
--
Middle-income jobs are
disappearing from the
economy. The share of
middle-income jobs in the
United States has fallen
from 52% in 1980 to 42% in
2010.
--
Middle-income jobs have been
replaced by low-income jobs,
which now make up 41% of
total employment.
-- 17
million Americans with
college degrees are doing
jobs that require less than
the skill levels associated
with a bachelor's degree.
-- Over
the past year, nominal wages
grew only 1.7% while all
consumer prices, including
food and energy, increased
by 2.7%.
-- Wages
and salaries have fallen
from 60% of personal income
in 1980 to 51% in 2010.
Government transfers have
risen from 11.7% of personal
income in 1980 to 18.4% in
2010, a post-war high.
The
bottom line is simple says
Schwenninger: The middle
class is shrinking, which
threatens the social
composition and stability of
the world's biggest economy.
"I worry that we're becoming
a barbell society - a lot of
money wealth and power at
the top, increasing
hollowness at the center,
which I think provides the
stability and the heart and
soul of the society... and
then too many people in fear
of falling down."
|