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Monday, April 2, 2012

Only The Rich Are Benefiting From The Economic Recovery


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  1. ReportEaling | April 2 9:38am | Permalink
    This piece summarises the evolution of the population under modern capitalism into three layers. A small, super-rich elite who will, in the main, enjoy limitless comfort and pleasure, organised by a middle strata of around 20% who will administer the provision of services from the rest of humanity. This layer will enjoy adequate housing and benefits, holidays, and perks of office as administrators. While they will envy the elite, they will be more influenced by their perception of the relative horrors of the underclass, the 75% or so who will have few if any savings and will be living essentially hand to mouth, more and more dependent on the administration class to survive, rather than thrive. Movement between the three classes will grow even more difficult than now, although brains and beauty will still allow limited upward mobility. Oh brave new world!

    Or is it?
  2. ReportSoftcapitalist | April 2 9:46am | Permalink
    Conveniently most statistics, and more importantly government performance indicators are based on average. If the median income, house price, etc would be used then the pictures would be clearly less flattering.

    This is not only about the recovery. Unfortunately it is about the ability of the current capitalist system to deliver growth equitably. There are two theories: one that the government should redistribute it, and the other is the market redistributes it, eventually (the rich spend their money and create jobs that allow the others to buy their ipad or F150 in the case of the US, or afford their commuter rail fares in the case of Britain).

    Why should any economic system be fair? Because it is in the nature of the human beings to live socially, in harmony/balance and share the proceeds of their work (not equally, but fairly). Gaping inequality cannot ensure prosperity. Ford's Mullaly has done a fine job but is his performance so much better than that of a more ordinary employee to justify the pay difference between $6k and $29,000k?

    Before and during the recession the data showed the same picture: the beneficiaries of productivity "miracle", consumer or corporate leverage, financial "innovation", entrepreneurship or government spending is by and large the small group of the richest people. Globalization, technology progress or education differences are half-explanations that don't shed healthy, bright light, nor bring in solutions.

    In any case, any system that constantly creates inequality and does not bring spiritual, physical and material wealth for most of the people working within it, is worthless for the society and should be reformed.

    http://softcapitalist.blogspot.co.uk/
  3. Reportbalasrini | April 2 9:51am | Permalink
    the 99% must wait for the 'animal spirits' of the rich to revive before they can hope jobs come their way.

    don't argue. we must be patient: the rich:after all have the big issues of national debt, inflation, regulations causing them sleepless nights, while the others can afford to think of the mundane probs of paying mortgages, feeding the kids,paying for education, health care etc.

    spare a thot for the poor rich. in fact, pray for them. the only way they can console themselves is to shop for more luxe goods.
  4. ReportDogfark | April 2 11:33am | Permalink
    So what is new? The rich get richer and the poor breed! That's the way a free market works and has always worked. There's too much media focus on equality of wealth and not enough why there isn't: inequality of effect and motivation. The rich took risks, worked long and hard. Action, re-action. The rest: little or no action, no re-action. Our material world of advertising illusion has most people believing they are entitle to a luxury lifestyle with the earnings of a 9-5 job. No way. Sorry, that's the advertisers fault, not the rich. We can't keep having more and more people in the word and maintain the same standard for everyone, one generation after another. Resources are limited. Something has to give. Its simple, the fewer people competing, the better chance everyone can raise their standard. Keep over-populating the world and we'll all be poor.
  5. ReportAdanac | April 2 11:34am | Permalink
    I've done business and lived in the UK, Canada and the US. Generally speaking Europe is too socialist and the US is too hell bent on capitalism. Canada seems to have found the right middle ground. Canada still has a middle class unlike the US, has universal health care for all and yet significantly less debt per GDP.
  6. ReportSinopticus | April 2 11:54am | Permalink
    So what?

    More quality control please, O! FT, against this left wing drivel.....
  7. ReportMichael B | April 2 12:11pm | Permalink
    Typical Reich commentary! Ignore the problem and exploit results. Americans have at least 23,000,000 citizens out of work. These are the backbone of the so-called middle class. In the under thirty cohort, the numbers amount to greater than 30% . The current American administration has done little to get these citizens back to work which is the crux of the problem. And it has done little to solving the problem of the more than 15,000,000 illegal immigrants living in the nation. the rot starts at the top but that is not being addressed here. tipbermuda.com
  8. Reportdopper | April 2 12:22pm | Permalink
    Dogfark your conflating all the rich as if they all made their money the same. The entrepreneur who took risk and founded a business isn't the issue. It's CEO who were able to argue they should be paid like entrepreneurs, even though taking over an established Fortune 500 company isn't as much as a risk as starting one from scratch. They wanted the same reward without the same risk. It's those who inherited their money, they took no risk their grandparents did, they showed no superior effort to anyone else. Stop conflating risk taking entrepreneurs and rich people, the two groups over lap but aren't the same thing.
  9. ReportThamesford | April 2 12:37pm | Permalink
    Mr Reich, your piece is lacking in solutions. Funny how you "won't talk about those". You can foment the anger but your ideas would die on the vine with the majority.
    "Only", "always" & "never" are subtle hyperbole that gain their false credibility from their apparent comprehensiveness, but should always be used with caution. Their prescence is the sign of a weak or ill-conceived argument.
  10. ReportThamesford | April 2 12:39pm | Permalink
    Additionally, this time, some of us are more informed...

    http://www.breitba...Strategy-Whos-Next
  11. ReportPaul431 | April 2 12:51pm | Permalink
    If politicians designed policies to encourage the average person to save money things could improve fast. For example: allow anybody to save up to $50k per year of earnings with pre tax money if saved for the long term and tax more heavily the income above that to compensate for the revenue lost. Today all incentives are designed for the average person to borrow money. Borrow for your car, borrow for your home, borrow for your holidays. And make most interest deductible. Great! And then we wonder how is it that the average person does not have anything other than debts.
  12. ReportPIsmo100 | April 2 1:05pm | Permalink
    RR is a commie...Pure and simple. He wants welfare and poverty for all...
  13. ReportScott W Peters | April 2 1:06pm | Permalink
    Banksters and a monstrous sized Federal Government that has an incestuous relationship with them is the root cause. Someday when it gets bad enough the people will wake up and realize the only solution is to attack the monster whether with a scalpel at the voting box or a hatchet on the revolutionary frontline. Before then they'll keep voting for the monster in the hope it'll oppress them a little less than their neighbor.
  14. ReportArsenio Tolo | April 2 1:23pm | Permalink
    Correct.

    Alll those gains of the richest are given by the Federal Reserve- having supported assset bubbles and massive inflation on paper assets.
  15. Reportbeepbop | April 2 1:25pm | Permalink
    Oh please, the deficit spending just goes to create more government jobs and elderly healthcare. Why don't we talk about quantitative easing propping up commodity prices (you know food and fuel people actually need to make stocks (which the rich own the most of) artificially high.
  16. Reportbut not as we know it | April 2 1:48pm | Permalink
    Dogfark.
    Totally agree. The only refinement needed is an effective death duty of, say, 90%. The hard-working, risk-taking wealthy will still be able to gift their children with privileged education, lifestyle and opportunities and will still be rewarded for their industry. The great advantage from stopping the inter-generational transfers is the prevention of the children of the wealthy becoming indolent, greedy and self-serving, freeing them up to earn their money.
  17. Reportrationalexuberance | April 2 2:08pm | Permalink
    OMG.. The textbook liberal line is alive and well in RR. The class warfare-structured statement that the "bottom" 90% do not own many stocks is complete BS, because it ignores 401k, IRA,etc holdings in stocks. And the last time I looked, the Constitution stated "promote the general welfare"...not provide the general welfare.
  18. Reportnick calamos | April 2 2:19pm | Permalink
    More class warfare. Being rich is an outcome of some favorable action. The article should be titled "Only the highly educated and those that built a business are benefiting from America's recovery". Change the argument from the despised wealthy to the actions necessary to compete in the knowledge based economy. Anything else is counterproductive to American society.
  19. ReportEconomic (not political) Liberal | April 2 2:24pm | Permalink
    Very shallow and incomplete analysis. It is typical for the value of capital to recover quicker than labor during an economic recovery, just as the value of capital is quicker to fall during an economic collapse. Like most articles by liberal populist economists the author neglects to point out that the income and net worth of the richest segment of population suffered the quickest and the most during the collpase of 2008-2009. And unfortunately, most of the net worth of the average American is tied up in housing, encouraged by historical unnatural subsidies by both the Federal Government (via tax policy and loan guarantees) and the Federal Reserve (via low interest rates). So, thank you to both federal institutions for encouraging ownership of an artificially inflated asset class by most of its citizens, especially those who can least afford it.
  20. ReportNigel Speakman | April 2 2:28pm | Permalink
    The problem for the West is too much debt. This takes a very long time to pay off. In order for it to be paid off economic growth is going to be small to non existant. When you have surplus cash and no debts life is pretty good and it always will be. Perhaps ordinary people in the West with too much debt need to financially restructure their lives. Like declaring personal bankruptcy. Discharge their debts and start again. Those institutions that lent money to those who could never repay need to take the hit.
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