From Robert Reich - please follow link to original.
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http://robertreich.org/
It’s the season to show concern for the less fortunate among us. We should also be concerned about the widening gap between the most fortunate and everyone else.
Although
it’s still possible to win the lottery (your chance of winning $636
million in the recent Mega Millions sweepstakes was one in 259 million),
the biggest lottery of all is what family we’re born into. Our life
chances are now determined to an unprecedented degree by the wealth of
our parents.
That’s not always been the case. The faith that
anyone could move from rags to riches – with enough guts and gumption,
hard work and nose to the grindstone – was once at the core of the
American Dream.
And equal opportunity was the heart of the
American creed. Although imperfectly achieved, that ideal eventually
propelled us to overcome legalized segregation by race, and to guarantee
civil rights. It fueled efforts to improve all our schools and widen
access to higher education. It pushed the nation to help the unemployed,
raise the minimum wage, and provide pathways to good jobs. Much of this
was financed by taxes on the most fortunate.
But for more than
three decades we’ve been going backwards. It’s far more difficult today
for a child from a poor family to become a middle-class or wealthy
adult. Or even for a middle-class child to become wealthy.
The
major reason is widening inequality. The longer the ladder, the harder
the climb. America is now more unequal that it’s been for eighty or more
years, with the most unequal distribution of income and wealth of all
developed nations. Equal opportunity has become a pipe dream.
Rather
than respond with policies to reverse the trend and get us back on the
road to equal opportunity and widely-shared prosperity, we’ve spent much
of the last three decades doing the opposite.
Taxes have been
cut on the rich, public schools have deteriorated, higher education has
become unaffordable for many, safety nets have been shredded, and the
minimum wage has been allowed to drop 30 percent below where it was in
1968, adjusted for inflation.
Congress has just passed a tiny
bipartisan budget agreement, and the Federal Reserve has decided to wean
the economy off artificially low interest rates. Both decisions reflect
Washington’s (and Wall Street’s) assumption that the economy is almost
back on track.
But it’s not at all back on the track it was on more than three decades ago.
It’s certainly not on track for the
record 4 million Americans now unemployed for more than six months, or
for the unprecedented 20 million American children in poverty (we now
have the highest rate of child poverty of all developed nations other
than Romania), or for the third of all working Americans whose jobs are
now part-time or temporary, or for the majority of Americans whose real
wages continue to drop.
How can the economy be back on track when
95 percent of the economic gains since the recovery began in 2009 have
gone to the richest 1 percent?
The underlying issue is a moral one: What do we owe one another as members of the same society?
Conservatives
answer that question by saying it’s a matter of personal choice – of
charitable works, philanthropy, and individual acts of kindness joined
in “a thousand points of light.”
But that leaves out what we
could and should seek to accomplish together as a society. It neglects
the organization of our economy, and its social consequences. It
minimizes the potential role of democracy in determining the rules of
the game, as well as the corruption of democracy by big money. It
overlooks our strivings for social justice.
In short, it ducks the meaning of a decent society.
Last
month Pope Francis wondered aloud whether “trickle-down theories, which
assume that economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will
inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and
inclusiveness…”. Rush Limbaugh accused the Pope of being a Marxist for
merely raising the issue.
But the question of how to bring about
greater justice and inclusiveness is as American as apple pie. It has
animated our efforts for more than a century – during the Progressive
Era, the New Deal, the Great Society, and beyond — to make capitalism
work for the betterment of all rather merely than the enrichment of a
few.
The supply-side, trickle-down, market-fundamentalist views
that took root in America in the early 1980s got us fundamentally off
track.
To get back to the kind of shared prosperity and upward
mobility we once considered normal will require another era of
fundamental reform, of both our economy and our democracy
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
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Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
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