Monday Reads

Good Morning!

I’ve  been wondering quite a bit recently about what is becoming of the American Middle Class.  Some times it seems that the kind of situation that I grew up in is a far grasp from what any potential grandchildren of mine will have.   Both of my daughters are highly educated and I still feel this way. While I study so much on the rise of a strong, vibrant middle class in many South East Asian countries, I cannot help but wonder what’s gone so wrong that we seem to be losing ours? This month has been a very violent one here in Louisiana.  We’ve had a 7 year old boy with cerebral palsy killed–dismembered actually–by a mother’s boyfriend and a number of gang shootings recently.  These kinds of crimes always increase with economic hopelessness and summer heat.  It gets to me a lot these days.

Here’s a good question from September’s The Atlantic:  “Can the Middle Class be Saved?”

It’s hard to miss just how unevenly the Great Recession has affected different classes of people in different places. From 2009 to 2010, wages were essentially flat nationwide—but they grew by 11.9 percent in Manhattan and 8.7 percent in Silicon Valley. In the Washington, D.C., and San Jose (Silicon Valley) metro areas—both primary habitats for America’s meritocratic winners—job postings in February of this year were almost as numerous as job candidates. In Miami and Detroit, by contrast, for every job posting, six people were unemployed. In March, the national unemployment rate was 12 percent for people with only a high-school diploma, 4.5 percent for college grads, and 2 percent for those with a professional degree.

Housing crashed hardest in the exurbs and in more-affordable, once fast-growing areas like Phoenix, Las Vegas, and much of Florida—all meccas for aspiring middle-class families with limited savings and education. The professional class, clustered most densely in the closer suburbs of expensive but resilient cities like San Francisco, Seattle, Boston, and Chicago, has lost little in comparison. And indeed, because the stock market has rebounded while housing values have not, the middle class as a whole has seen more of its wealth erased than the rich, who hold more-diverse portfolios. A 2010 Pew study showed that the typical middle-class family had lost 23 percent of its wealth since the recession began, versus just 12 percent in the upper class.

The ease with which the rich and well educated have shrugged off the recession shouldn’t be surprising; strong winds have been at their backs for many years. The recession, meanwhile, has restrained wage growth and enabled faster restructuring and offshoring, leaving many corporations with lower production costs and higher profits—and their executives with higher pay.

The entire issue covers the disappearing US middle class and it’s worth checking out.  Yes, it was happening prior to the 2007-2008 meltdown, but the acceleration of the decline of the standards of living for most Americans is hard to miss.  We shouldn’t forget how that happened.  Steven Pearlstein at the WP places blame squarely with the corporate lobby.

When it started out all you really wanted was to push back against a few meddlesome regulators or shave a point or two off your tax rate, but you were concerned it would look like special-interest rent-seeking. So when the Washington lobbyists came up with the clever idea of launching a campaign against over-regulation and over-taxation, you threw in some money, backed some candidates and financed a few lawsuits.

The more successful it was, however, the more you put in — hundreds of millions of the shareholders’ dollars, laundered through once-respected organizations such as the Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, phoney front organizations with innocent-sounding names such as Americans for a Sound Economy, and a burgeoning network of Republican PACs and financing vehicles. And thanks to your clever lawyers and a Supreme Court majority that is intent on removing all checks to corporate power, it’s perfectly legal.

Somewhere along the way, however, this effort took on a life of its own. What started as a reasonable attempt at political rebalancing turned into a jihad against all regulation, all taxes and all government, waged by right-wing zealots who want to privatize the public schools that educate your workers, cut back on the basic research on which your products are based, shut down the regulatory agencies that protect you from unscrupulous competitors and privatize the public infrastructure that transports your supplies and your finished goods. For them, this isn’t just a tactic to brush back government. It’s a holy war to destroy it — and one that is now out of your control.

Dr. Christine Romer suggests that all we have to do is look to our history for good lessons.  Yes, she’s the Obama economic advisor that kept having to explain continually why all those labor market numbers were looking so bad for two years while not having much input into the change that would’ve made things different right now.

One reason the Depression dragged on so long was that the rapid recovery of the mid-1930s was interrupted by a second severe recession in late 1937. Though many factors had a role in the “recession within a recession,” monetary and fiscal policy retrenchment were central. In monetary policy, the Fed doubled bank reserve requirements and the Treasury stopped monetizing the gold inflow. In fiscal policy, the federal budget swung sharply, from a stimulative deficit of 3.8 percent of G.D.P. in 1936 to a small surplus in 1937.

The lesson here is to beware of withdrawing policy support too soon. A switch to contractionary policy before the economy is fully recovered can cause the economy to decline again. Such a downturn may be particularly large when an economy is still traumatized from an earlier crisis.

The recent downgrade of American government debt by Standard & Poor’s makes this point especially crucial. It would be a mistake to respond by reducing the deficit more sharply in the near term. That would almost surely condemn us to a repeat of the 1937 downturn. And higher unemployment would make it all that much harder to get the deficit under control.

Salon‘s Glen Greenwald has Yves Smith guest posting. She reminds us that income inequality is bad for rich people too.

A new survey found that 64% of the public doesn’t have enough funds on hand to cope with a $1000 emergency. Wages are falling for 90% of the population. And disabuse yourself of the idea that the rich might decide to bestow their largesse on the rest of us. Various studies have found that upper class individuals are less empathetic and altruistic than lower status individuals.

This outcome is not accidental. Taxes on top earners are the lowest in three generations. Yet their complaints about the prospect of an increase to a level that is still awfully low by recent historical standards is remarkable.

Given that this rise in wealth has been accompanied by an increase in the power of those at the top, is there any hope for achieving a more just society? Bizarrely, the self interest of the upper crust argues in favor of it. Profoundly unequal societies are bad for everyone, including the rich.

First, numerous studies have ascertained that more money does not make people happier beyond a threshold level that is not all that high. Once people have enough to pay for a reasonable level of expenses and build up a safety buffer, more money does not produce more happiness.

But even more important is that high levels of income inequality exert a toll on all, particularly on health. Would you trade a shorter lifespan for a much higher level of wealth? Most people would say no, yet that is precisely the effect that the redesigning of economic arrangements to serve the needs at the very top is producing. Highly unequal societies are unhealthy for their members, even members of the highest strata. Not only do these societies score worse on all sorts of indicators of social well-being, but they exert a toll even on the rich. Not only do the plutocrats have less fun, but a number of studies have found that income inequality lowers the life expectancy even of the rich.

All the economists that I follow have been abuzz about that NYT’s article on Sunday on how politics and not economics is driving Obama’s policy.  Here’s some thoughts from Mark Thoma.

When you are arguing that deficit reduction — less spending — creates jobs because it’s politically expedient to make this point and you care more about votes than fixing the economy, the truth can be uncomfortable. Is it so hard to explain that yes, in the long-run deficit reduction can be helpful. When the economy is near full employment and the demand for investment funding is high, the government’s use of funds to finance its deficit can slow investment activity. Near full employment, government spending can crowd out private investment so we need a long-run plan for deficit reduction.

But presently, with so much idle capacity and with so much liquidity looking unsuccessfully for a place to earn profits, no such fear exists. Government spending won’t crowd out private sector investment, it will provide a needed net addition to output and provide jobs for struggling households. Borrowing costs are extraordinarily cheap and there are plenty of infrastructure needs for the government to invest in, so it’s not as though we wouldn’t get something of value for our money over and above the needed help it provides to working class households. It’s a short-run and a long-run win.

Deficit reduction in the short-run makes things worse, not better, and hence harms rather than helps reelection chances. I understand that the administration is doing its best to prevent immediate cuts, and that the recent deficit agreement doesn’t put large cuts into place until 2013. But there are still small cuts endorsed by the administration — we are still going in the wrong direction — and if employment remains sluggish come election time, and if the administration has no public record of trying to do anything about it, what argument will they have?  We could have provided more jobs, but we didn’t bother to try because we didn’t think we could explain ourselves to the public? We knew better, but the polls were unfavorable so we didn’t bother to pursue it?

I’ve spent the entire day flummoxed by the obvious cynicism that underlies the idea that it’s easier to sell out all principles than actually elucidate an answer to the problem that we know we have and that we know every one cares about which is lack of jobs and lack of economic growth to due lack of aggregate demand. We should all go to the White House and start pitching macroeconomics textbooks over the fences.

Anyway, that’ll get things started today.  What’s on your reading and blogging list?


24 Comments on “Monday Reads”

  1. northwestrain's avatar northwestrain says:

    Small error — it was Yves Smith who wrote the guest column for Glen Greenwald. I’ve really enjoyed her guest columns at Salon.

  2. native1's avatar native1 says:

    Very nice. I have thought for a long time that the negative effects of our policies on the rich need to be hammered home on a wide and daily basis. It is sad but it seems as if self interest is the only motivator in our society at this time.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Thx. I’ll correct that.

    • Allison's avatar Allison says:

      I think it is self-interest coupled with bigotry and classism.

      A lot of conservatives have a very real disdain for poor people who can’t use their “bootstraps”. There is just no empathy – they can’t relate.

      A lot of “progressives” look down their noses at uneducated people – the kind who don’t know or care what arugula is. They loathe the bitter-clingers.

  3. minkoffminx's avatar Minkoff Minx says:

    Great post. Dak, do you think the Obama admin will ever get it?

    Here is something in Politico: Buffett: I beg you to raise my taxes – Politico Staff – POLITICO.com

    In a New York Times op-ed on Monday, titled “Stop Coddling the Rich,” Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway’s chair and CEO, said he and his “mega-rich” friends have been spared the “shared sacrifice” the country’s leaders have asked for as the country veers toward a double-dip recession.
    “While the poor and middle class fight for us in Afghanistan, and while most Americans struggle to make ends meet, we mega-rich continue to get our extraordinary tax breaks,” he wrote.

    “These and other blessings are showered upon us by legislators in Washington who feel compelled to protect us, much as if we were spotted owls or some other endangered species. It’s nice to have friends in high places.”

  4. madamab's avatar madamab says:

    Yves Smith is a wonderful economics writer, but I’m not sure she quite accepts the sociopathy of the oligarchy/patriarchy.

    People who think it is just fine and dandy to steal our jobs, hide all their profits overseas so they don’t have to pay even the small amount of taxes we demand of them, and look upon Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid as giant open treasure chests ripe for pillaging, do not give a rat’s patootie about so-called negative effects on themselves. The only negative effect they care about is being poor. And the way things are looking, they’ll never have to worry about that.

    • northwestrain's avatar northwestrain says:

      One thing I remember about the east coast are all the mansions (some now museums) of the ultra wealthy from the Gilded age (late 19th century) and the Roaring 20s. I wonder what this age of wealth disparity will be called?

      • Pilgrim's avatar Pilgrim says:

        age of greed gone amok?

      • madamab's avatar madamab says:

        Age of “Austerity” works for me.

        I love looking at those old mansions/museums, Northwest. Actually, my favorite so far is Kykuit – the Rockefellers’ home in the Hudson Valley. One of the Rockefeller wives, Abby, founded the Museum of Modern Art with two of her wealthy women friends.

        Not only are the house and grounds gorgeous and filled with beautiful sculptures, but the basement is like a mini-MOMA. Truly incredible!

        Back then, at least, the robber barons had the decency to give a lot of their money towards the public good. These days, very few have the same ethos…Bill and Melinda Gates being one of the exceptions.

  5. mjames's avatar mjames says:

    The most enraging thing is that the middle class did NOTHING to cause this “recession.” We paid our Social Security taxes; we put our money into those vile 401k plans; we followed the rules. Now, we’re left with no jobs, no pensions, no homes, and, soon, no Social Security.

    Talking about this stuff in the abstract drives me nuts.

    One thing I’ve never found disagreement on with anyone of any political persuasion: the guilty should pay – monetarily and with significant jail time. Now that would be the winning political strategy. No can do, however, because Obama is seriously sick in the head. One sick vain talentless prick.

  6. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Manager of Chicago LGBT health center died in Indiana State Fair stage collapse.

    Christina Santiago, 29, of Chicago, was among those who died, according to the Marion County coroner’s office.

    The other victims were Alina Bigjohny, 23, of Fort Wayne; Tammy Vandam, 42, of Wanatah, Ind.; and two Indianapolis residents: Glenn Goodrich, 49, and Nathan Byrd, 51. It was Byrd who died overnight.

    Santiago was the programming manager for the Lesbian Community Care Project at the Howard Brown Health Center, her employer said in a news release Sunday.

    “The sudden and devastating loss of Christina has left the entire community, including her Howard Brown Health Center family, heartbroken,” said Jamal M. Edwards, President and CEO of Howard Brown.

    “She has been a leading and driving force in the expansion of our women’s health services division and a powerful advocate for all LGBT women,” Edwards said.

    In addition to those who died, 45 were people taken to hospitals, according to Indiana State police. Among those injured was Alisha Brennon, Santiago’s partner, according to Howard Brown.

    Brennon remained in critical condition in the intensive care unit at Wishard Hospital today, said hospital spokesman Todd Harper.

  7. B Kilpatrick's avatar B Kilpatrick says:

    Pearlstein is repeating a myth that seems to have become engrained in our national political mythology. The Reaganites of the 1980s were not, in any sense of the word, interested in cutting government spending or growth in any significant way whatsoever. They were, rather, interested in cutting taxes and regulations affecting those industries and businesses which they represented while using taxes and regulations to harm or hamstring those businesses and industries which competed with the ones which they represented.

    Hell, Jimmy Carter did more to move this country toward a free market by deregulating a lot of the transportation industry than any of the Reaganites or their gods like Friedman ever did.

    In other words, even though people consistently do it, blaming the “free market” or “deregulation” for the current state of affairs makes about as much sense as calling George Bush an honest man.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Well, I agree that you can’t blame free markets because there are none in this country because they are all–at best–monopolistic competition. There’s a complete myth around free markets. They haven’t existed since the 1700s when everything was based in agriculture because that’s about the only markets that fit the bill. Deregulation has a lot to do with the current state of affairs because deregulating finance markets completely destabilized them and made them subject to moral hazard and information asymmetry. If we’d have had better mortgage origination regulation and the CDS market was standardized, a good deal of this wouldn’t have happened. Plus the deregulation of banks starting in 1980 led to this current near-oligopoly market. Deregulation has created–in the case of the financial markets–less “free” markets because it’s led to incredible market concentration.

      • fiscalliberal's avatar fiscalliberal says:

        ” If we’d have had better mortgage origination regulation and the CDS market was standardized, a good deal of this wouldn’t have happened.” –

        I agree

        In short Greenspan should have enforced the laws already passed on origination, They should have passed what Brooksly Born recommended. By the way, it was Greenspan, Ruben, Gensler and Larry Summers who publicly smashed Brooksly Born to get it voted down.

        Oh by the way a attourney general who enforced the laws on fraud would have been nice also.