Reich writes: "January's increase in hiring is good news, but it masks a bigger and more disturbing story - the continuing downward mobility of the American middle class."
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
The Downward Mobility of the Middle Class
06 February 12
anuary's increase in hiring is good news, but it masks a bigger and more disturbing story - the continuing downward mobility of the American middle class.
Most of the new jobs being created are in the lower-wage sectors of the economy - hospital orderlies and nursing aides, secretaries and temporary workers, retail and restaurant. Meanwhile, millions of Americans remain working only because they've agreed to cuts in wages and benefits. Others are settling for jobs that pay less than the jobs they've lost. Entry-level manufacturing jobs are paying half what entry-level manufacturing jobs paid six years ago.
Other people are falling out of the middle class because they've lost their jobs, and many have also lost their homes. Almost one in three families with a mortgage is now underwater, holding their breath against imminent foreclosure.
The percent of Americans in poverty is its highest in two decades, and more of us are impoverished than at any time in the last fifty years. A recent analysis of federal data by the New York Times showed the number of children receiving subsidized lunches rose to 21 million in the last school year, up from 18 million in 2006-2007. Nearly a dozen states experienced increases of 25 percent or more. Under federal rules, children from famlies with incomes up to 130 percent of the poverty line, $29,055 for a family of four, are eligible.
Experts say the bad economy is the main factor driving the increase. According to an analysis of census data by the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University, 37 percent of young families with children were in poverty in 2010. It's likely that rate has worsened.
Mitt Romney says he's not concerned about the very poor because they have safety nets to protect them. He says he's concerned about the middle class. Romney doesn't seem to realize how much of the middle class is becoming poor.
But Romney doesn't like safety nets to begin with. He's been accusing President Obama of inviting a culture of dependency. "Over the past three years Barack Obama has been replacing our merit-based society with an entitlement society," he says over and over, arguing that our economic problems stem from a sharp rise in dependency. Get rid of these benefits and people will work harder.
He and other Republicans point to government data showing that direct payments to individuals have shot up by almost $600 billion since 2009, a 32 percent increase. And 49 percent of Americans now live in homes where at least one person is collecting a federal benefit such as food stamps or unemployment insurance, up from 44 percent in 2008.
But Romney and other Republicans have cause and effect backwards. The reason for the rise in benefits is Americans got clobbered in 2008 and many are still sinking. They and their families need whatever help they can get.
The real scandal, as I've said before, is America's safety nets are too small and shot through with holes. Only 40 percent of the unemployed qualify for unemployment benefits, for example, because they weren't working full time or long enough on a single job before they were let go. The unemployment system doesn't recognize how many Americans work part time on several jobs, and move from job to job.
And even those who are lucky enough to be collecting employment benefits are about to lose them. A record and growing percent of the unemployed have been jobless for six months or more, and Republicans in Congress are unwilling to extend their benefits.
Romney's budget proposals would shred safety nets even more. According to an analysis by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, his plan would throw 10 million low-income people off the benefit rolls for food stamps or cut benefits by thousands of dollars a year, or some combination. "These cuts would primarily affect very low-income families with children, seniors and people with disabilities," the Center concludes.
At the same time, Romney's tax plan would boost the incomes of America's most wealthy citizens, who are already taking home an almost unprecedented share of that nation's total income. Romney wants to permanently extend George W. Bush's tax cuts, reduce corporate income tax rates, and eliminate the estate tax. These tax cuts would increase the incomes of people earning more than a million dollars a year by an average of $295,874 annually, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.
By reducing government revenues, Romney's tax cuts would squeeze programs for the poor even further. Extending the Bush tax cuts will add $1.2 trillion to the nation's budget deficit in just two years. That's the same as the amount that's supposed to be saved by automatic spending cuts scheduled to start next year - which, by the way, will hit the poor especially hard.
Oh, I almost forgot. Romney and other Republicans also want to repeal of Obama's health care law, thereby leaving 30 million Americans without health insurance.
The downward mobility of America's middle class is the big news, but the GOP apparently hasn't heard about it. Maybe it's too hard to hear about from that far away - and Mitt Romney is certainly far away. His unearned income last year was more than $20 million. That's about as much as the combined earnings of a thousand American families at or just above the poverty line.
Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written thirteen books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," "Supercapitalism" and his latest book, "AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America's Future." His 'Marketplace' commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.
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The settlement gifts $2000 to 750,000 families (BFD) and refinances about 1 million... Just about enough to get him through the election. Homeowners are $750 billion underwater... 12 million foreclosures are on the way and 47% of Americans are 1-2 paychecks way from poverty. And Obama blesses a $20 billion / 40 state settlement for fraud...that has disrupted the lives of all Americans and the worldwide economy... Go figure?!
It really does not matter what Romeny may or may not have done. Right now we are looking at what this idiot has done to us!and to the millions of people who had their home foreclosed unlawfully and won't be compensated.
Now he is touting he'll help the "responsible" homeowners ... And offering bills for those "current" on their mortgage. They probably still have a paycheck. But he ignores the first level folks and the 4-7 million homes in the foreclosure pipeline (another 12-19 million Americans) are the people that need the help. These families have been devastated, children ripped from their homes in Gestopo-like raids and cherished belongings stolen by the raiders or thrown in the dump.
No it's not Romney - but what the hell is it that it can ignore the devastation of over 40 million Americans? With a lot more to follow - just ask anyone that tried for HAMP or modification. The "currents" won't be far behind. Spots on a leopard don't change.
One side just wants us all to be and act like slaves to the corporate and the other side wants to just make us slaves to debt.
I see no real difference or no hope in either approach.
Obama caters to the banking cartel and the Republicans cater to big oil and multi national corporate interests. No matter what the rhetoric coming from either side, actions speak louder than words. Until Americans get angry and I mean really angry at what has been done to them, I see the continued erosion of the American middle class and what we have come to know as the American way of life.
Can you imagine the type of jobs this would create!!!
I appreciate y'r optimism but try maintaining, let alone starting, a small business in this climate, especially if you have been already ruined by it's many-pronged tentacles (including the criminal non-system of medical delivery to those who can afford it), machinations and obfuscations backed by the incompetent and unforgiving Credit Bureaus.
I'm not shouting you down but just trying to illustrate my own truth after having a fifteen-year long and pretty solid business go down the tubes. That's my situation (like many of my ilk, at least where I live) and I'm tearing what's left of my hair out just trying to stay afloat and find a way to upgrade equipment to keep up and open new fields without any backing.
I pride myself as being pretty creative and optimistic and have actually prospered in past "recessions" but this is a steep, slippery downer and I'm close to being baffled for the first time in a long, adventurous life.
The "American Spirit" you refer to was strong when I came here and is why I stayed but it has been chipped away and eroded by those who want everything, not just a large slice of what was once a pretty large pie.
http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm
How successful can they be in face of that competition?
There are multiple unemployment rates. One is the rate that counts all potential workers; this number is available but is not the one publicized. Another counts all persons that are looking for work. This is the that get the publicity.
In both cases the calculation is simple. The number of people without jobs (variable) divided into the the total number of people.
"...a constant stream of this BS about employment getting better...makes for a feel-good sound bit but the reality is something entirely different..."
There's no hope for the US as long as it is dominated by the Washington Regime. We need a regime change. Leave Syria or Iran alone. Regime change starts at home.
Many of our politicians claim to be religious yet Jesus threw out the money changers. If he had any contempt for anyone it was the very wealthy. Yet our country is an aggressive militant empire that worships money and power over everything else. We sell and promote fear like it was a commodity. We have allowed our TBTF banking cartel to rape and ruin our population and all you can say is that you don't care because you are doing fine and that others on this blog should quit being so negative. Grow up and get real!
Isn't it ironic that our gov't is engaged in toppling these supposed despots like Saleh in Yemen, Mubarek in Egypt, Gaddafi in Libya and now they want to go for Syria and Iran meanwhile we have our own regime to fight here at home.
The protests we see in Egypt and even in Spain Greece, UK, France & Italy are incredible and inspiring. Sadly we would never see that many people on the streets here in the USA. Who is leading the OWS? Not the poor it is the University students and educated middle class
activists and some unions. As things get worse maybe the poor too will rise up.
I wonder if they ever consider what will happen if they accomplish their goals?
They usually think wistfully of the day when all the wealth will be theirs. The amazing thing is that everyone one of them is plotting when they will be able to suck up the wealth of the guy sitting next to them.
"Someday all the money in the world will belong to me, and me alone. Everyone will be my slave and I will be the most generous of rulers. I am so enlightened and wonderful, the world will be happy to give me all the money. Ahhhhhh."
I can't take it for more than a few minutes, but I do return every now and then and they are still thinking the same thing. ALL THE TIME!
So, Hank yes they do consider what will happen. Doesn't make them correct, because most of them are really not that bright.
Working people MUST NOT VOTE to keep anyone in Congress that is there now. These people must be voted out. Maybe the replacement may be lousy too, but that is a 'maybe'. It is CERTAIN to be bad for us if we send the corrupt back to screw us more than they have done already. Get rid of the bums! Let's try to get some democracy!
made a lot more sense than what you are saying here.
If enough people did that, it would end the regime as we know it. No One would be elected and the sham would be over.
Then what? Don't have a clue but anyway I see things, chaos is just around the corner anyway.
Of course the definition of "benefits" might be re-defined also as somebody who gets to have a seat and a break occasionally!
Then dictionaries could be re-written by economists for economists in a kind of eco-braille and the rest of us get a cartoon edition like the Sunday funnies.
And the definition of Small Business would begin at panhandling, pavement art and go on through neighbor lemonade stands.
Sorry, just getting a bit jaded by all the statistics and projections without substance.
It’s a little like the fox guarding the hen house pointing to a reduction in the number of eggs lost since he was given the job, while hiding the true extent of the loss by the fact that he is now able to eat the eggs before they are even counted.
Everything about the Republicans is an illusion, a deception with no real substance and, in fact, real and tragic consequences.
Not everyone can start a small business because not every profession has a skill that translates well into a consultancy or small business. Those of us who have backgrounds in "creative" or "soft skill" areas may be more vulnerable.
In a different vein, I too appreciate Mr. Reich's "tell it like it is" commentary about the types of jobs people are able to get. The situation he describes is the one I find myself in. Even with the work I can find, I cannot afford an apartment.
I am trying to be hopeful, but it's very scary to hear legitimate economists and academics say that at the rate of growth we are currently experiencing it will take another seven years to get everyone back to work. Does anyone else remember three years ago when they also said "seven years"? Let's see...seven minus three equals four; plus seven now equals 11 years. That's one hell of a burn rate.
That is like doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.
Optimism is fine but there is NO way to support this level of debt with the current level of productivity. We need a massive paradigm change or attitude adjustments. Just saying that people are to negative is at a minimum, very uncaring for your fellow travelers who are struggling.
Amyway, you picked the rebel state Oregon!!
I'm from the 1930s Crusade for Freedon - Political, mental, moral - one of the crusaders of that era still serching for thinkers and fighters!
The struggle now is human survival, not just America.
Tom Paibne, Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin all warned of the now American Plutocracy. Truthful information is one of the bigger problems
Contact me - Mhayden6@gamil.com
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