Showing posts with label rich getting richer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rich getting richer. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2014

According to distinguished economist Laura Tyson, "The disposable (after tax and transfer) incomes of poor families in the US have trailed those of their counterparts in other developed countries for decades. Now the US middle class is also falling behind." and "The main culprit behind the languishing fortunes of America’s middle class is slow wage growth." Read details below.


 ECONOMICS + CULTURE AND SOCIETY

LAURA TYSON

Laura Tyson, a former chair of the US President's Council of Economic Advisers, is a professor at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, a senior adviser at the Rock Creek Group, and a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Gender Parity. READ MORE
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NOV 30, 2014
The Rising Costs of US Income Inequality

BERKELEY – During the last several decades, income inequality in the United States has increased significantly – and the trend shows no sign of reversing. The last time inequality was as high as it is now was just before the Great Depression. Such a high level of inequality is not only incompatible with widely held norms of social justice and equality of opportunity; it poses a serious threat to America’s economy and democracy.

Underlying the country’s soaring inequality is income stagnation for the majority of Americans. With an expanding share of the gains from economic growth flowing to a tiny fraction of high-income US households, average family income for the bottom 90% has been flat since 1980. According to a recent report by the Council of Economic Advisers, if the share of income going to the bottom 90% was the same in 2013 as it was in 1973, median annual household income (adjusted for family size) would be 18%, or about $9,000, higher than it is now.

The disposable (after tax and transfer) incomes of poor families in the US have trailed those of their counterparts in other developed countries for decades. Now the US middle class is also falling behind.

During the last three decades, middle-income households in most developed countries enjoyed larger increases in disposable income than comparable US households. This year, the US lost the distinction of having the “most affluent” middle class to Canada, with several European countries not far behind. Once the generous public benefits in education, health care, and retirement are added to estimates of disposable family income in these countries, the relative position of the US middle class slips even further.

The main culprit behind the languishing fortunes of America’s middle class is slow wage growth. After peaking in the early 1970s, real (inflation-adjusted) median earnings of full-time workers aged 25-64 stagnated, partly owing to a slowdown in productivity growth and partly because of a yawning gap between productivity and wage growth.

Since 1980, average real hourly compensation has increased at an annual rate of 1%, or half the rate of productivity growth. Wage gains have also become considerably more unequal, with the biggest increases claimed by the top 10% of earners.

Moreover, technological change and globalization have reduced the share of middle-skill jobs in overall employment, while the share of lower-skill jobs has increased. These trends, along with a falling labor-force participation rate during the last decade, explain the stagnation of middle-class incomes.

For most Americans, wages are the primary source of disposable income, which in turn drives personal consumption spending – by far the largest component of aggregate demand. Over the past several decades, as growth in disposable income slowed, middle- and lower-income households turned to debt to sustain consumption.

Personal savings rates collapsed, and credit and mortgage debt soared, as households attempted to keep pace with the consumption norms of the wealthy. For quite some time, growing income inequality did not slow consumption growth; indeed, “trickle-down consumption” pressures fostered more consumer spending, more debt, more bankruptcy, and more financial stress among middle- and lower-income households.

The moment of reckoning arrived with the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Since then, aggregate consumption growth has been lackluster, as middle- and lower-income families have been forced to reduce their borrowing and pay down their debt, often through painful defaults on their homes – their primary (and often their only) asset.

As these families have tightened their belts, the pace of consumption spending and economic growth has become more dependent on earners at the top of the income distribution. Since the recession ended in 2009, real consumption spending by the top 5% has increased by 17%, compared to just 1% for the bottom 95%.

The recovery’s pattern has reinforced longer-run trends. In 2012, the top 5% of earners accounted for 38% of personal-consumption expenditure, compared to 27% in 1995. During that period, the consumption share for the bottom 80% of earners dropped from 47% to 39%.

Looking to the future, growing income inequality and stagnant incomes for the majority of Americans mean weaker aggregate demand and slower growth. Even more important, income inequality constrains economic growth on the supply side through its adverse effects on educational opportunity and human-capital development.

Children born into low- and high-income families are born with similar abilities. But they have very different educational opportunities, with children in low-income families less likely to have access to early childhood education, more likely to attend under-resourced schools that deliver inferior K-12 education, and less likely to attend or complete college.

The resulting educational-attainment gap between children born into low and high-income families emerges at an early age and grows over time. By some estimates, the gap today is twice as large as it was two decades ago. So the US is caught in a vicious circle: rising income inequality breeds more inequality in educational opportunity, which generates greater inequality in educational attainment. That, in turn, translates into a waste of human talent, a less educated workforce, slower economic growth, and even greater income inequality.

Although the economic costs of income inequality are substantial, the political costs may prove to be the most damaging and dangerous. The rich have both the incentives and the ability to promote policies that maintain or enhance their position.

Given the US Supreme Court’s evisceration of campaign-finance restrictions, it has become easier than ever for concentrated economic power to exercise concentrated political power. Though campaign contributions do not guarantee victory, they give the economic elite greater access to legislators, regulators, and other public officials, enabling them to shape the political debate in favor of their interests.

As a result, the US political system is increasingly dominated by money. This is a clear sign that income inequality in the US has risen to levels that threaten not only the economy’s growth, but also the health of its democracy.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Food for Thought: A Graphical Peek at Income Inequality in the United States

By David L. Griscom

Ever since my post on the the unemployment situation in the U.S. last Sunday, I have been trying to get up to speed on what is known about income equality. My starting point was "15 Mind-Blowing Facts About Wealth And Inequality In America" comprising 15 graphs, the most impressive of which I reproduce below in a slightly modified form to make the comments at the top and bottom legible.


Because the fine print in this figure could scarcely be read even in its web-published version, I reproduce those comments in the quotes below, which refer to the three vertical green bars in the top graph and then the two red bars in the lower graph.
The greater the gap between the rich and everyone else, the more dangerous economics becomes.
In 1928, a year before the U.S. economy nose-dived into depression, the top one-hundreth of 1 percent of U.S. families averaged 892 times more income than families in the bottom 90 percent.
In 1980, the last pre-Reagan year, families in the bottom 90 percent averaged $30,446 in income, after adjusting for inflation, $72 more than the the $30,374 comparable families earned in 2006. The top 0.01 percent in 1980 took home an average $5.4 million, less than one-fifth the $29.6 million average income of the super-rich in 2006.
In 2006 the top 0.01 percent averaged 976 times more income than America's bottom 90 percent.
In 1944 the top marginal tax rate -- the rate on income in the highest tax bracket -- hit 94 percent. In that year, taxpayers making more than $1 million, in 2005 inflation-adjusted dollars, paid Uncle Sam 65 percent of their total income in tax.
In 2005 taxpayers making more than $1 million faced a top marginal rate of 35 percent. These deep pockets paid just 23 percent of their income in federal tax.
Still, this nicely colored and annotated visual is a second-hand product. So I searched the web to find the authors of the two graphs. It turned out that the bottom graph was relatively well known (here for example), whereas the upper one was exclusively the result of relatively recent research by Professor Emmanuel Saez and his coworkers. The main publication on the subject authored by Thomas Piketty and Saez is entitled Income Inequality in the United States 1913--1998 and was published in the February 2003 issue of The Quarterly Journal of Economics. It has since been updated to 2006. These papers are based on study of individual income-tax returns that have been published by the IRS ever since 1913. The authors have carefully studied these returns in order to separate the shares of each source of income, such as wages, business income, and capital income. Their plotted data are for "tax units" defined as a married couple living together or a single adult, including dependents if any. Because of the much larger exemptions prior to 1944, uniting these data with the more recent data restricted them to studying only the top decile. However, they innovatively broke out the top decile into progressively smaller fractiles (see table below), where income is defined as gross income excluding capital gains and before individual taxes.


Inspired, I decided to search for recent tax data covering all deciles. The best I was able to find in the short time I spent looking were published by the U.S. Census Bureau as their Current Population Survery (CPS), and the latest CPS data available were for tax year 2008. These data are based a sampling of 117,181 households, sorted into bins incremented by $2,500 up to $99,999, with all of the higher earners (those studied in great detail by Saez) being binned simply as " $100,000 and over." Columns of data were presented for each of 15 definitions of income (plus 3 variants of Definition 1 and one variant of Definition 14) and were broken out only as quintiles.

I played around with graphing the CPS data and finally settled on a comparison of two of my plots, representing the "Definition 3" pre-tax data (where the rich pocketed all their capital gains while the poor were yet to receive government aid) and "Definition 15" (where the capital gains had been taxed and low-income households had become the benefactors of government transfers).

Note in my graphs below that the tall "spike" on the right (centered at $125,000) represents the percentage of households earning $100,000 OR MORE, rather then the percentage earning between $100,000 and $250,000, which would have been consistent with this style of graph. That is, to have been correct, the data for each $2,500-wide bin should have been plotted all the way out to Bill Gates. But this would have required a graph 10 times as long as those shown merely to pick up the first millionaire and 10,000 times as long to pick up the first billionaire on the present linear scale -- thought it could have been done on the same page by use of a logarithmic scale, had all those data been available (in this case they were not).

However, the left-hand "spike" centered on $1,250 is real and indicates that 12.7% of U.S. households were acutely stressed in 2008. Who can live on $100 a month? And what has become of those who became homeless? Have they been taken away to FEMA internment camps?


The top 2008 CPS quintiles (top 20%) are 96% and 87% comprised of the greater-than-$99,999 share for the Definition-3 and Definition 15 cases, respectively, and as listed in my graphs above they account respectively for 51.9% and 40% of the pre-tax and after-tax household incomes. The 2006 study by Saez found the top decile (top 10%) to include all households earning at least $104,700, and thus was 100% comprised of the greater-than-$99,999 share. Saez found this top decile to equal 49.7% of the total U.S. before-tax household income in 2006, a level higher than any other year since 1917.

In the figure below, Saez has decomposed this top decile income share into 3 progressively smaller, yet richer groups using data from 1913 through 2006.


Although less instructive, the two CPS-based bar graphs for 2008 that I've shown above do give a good impression of the results of progressive taxation in combination with government cash transfers to the impoverished.

So maybe the U.S. government is truly altruistic after all? Well, not exactly ...although in the graph below the U.S. is seen to beat out Italy, Greece, and Turkey.