Site icon The Punching Bag Post

Study Shows Bernie's 1% Rhetoric Was Wrong

<p>Listen to Bernie Sanders and you will be convinced that the hated &&num;8220&semi;one percent&&num;8221&semi; own everything &&num;8211&semi; and that everyone else on the planet is suffering&period; <em>In reality&comma; the upper-middle class is also bigger and richer than ever&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Since 1980&comma; the number of upper-middle class households has more than doubled &ndash&semi; far surpassing most economists&rsquo&semi; predictions for the year 2016&period; Roughly 4&period;4&percnt; of American households are currently considered&nbsp&semi;&ldquo&semi;upper-middle class&comma;&rdquo&semi; with incomes between &dollar;150&comma;000 and &dollar;199&comma;000&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The housing bust of 2008 led to the idea that only a tiny percentage of elite Americans &lpar;the so-called &ldquo&semi;one percent&rdquo&semi;&rpar; had escaped the financial crisis unscathed&period; While the market crash&nbsp&semi;did indeed drive a rift between the haves and the have-nots&comma; the &ldquo&semi;successful&rdquo&semi; population was far larger than Sanders would have us believe&period; According to the <em>Wall Street Journal<&sol;em>&comma; there is a significant income divide developing between the top 25&percnt;-30&percnt; of the American population and everyone else&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;Any discussion of inequality that is limited to the 1&percnt; misses a lot of the picture because it ignores the large inequality between the growing upper-middle class and the middle and lower-middle classes&comma;&rdquo&semi; explains Stephen Rose of the Urban Institute&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>America has no standard definitions for social classes&comma; so Rose uses a system similar to how we calculate the poverty rate &lpar;allowing for family size and changes over time&rpar;&period; Rose considers the upper-middle class to be any household earning between &dollar;100&comma;000 and &dollar;350&comma;000 &lpar;for a family of three&rpar;&period;&nbsp&semi;Using Census Bureau data&comma; Rose found that the majority of individuals in this class are&nbsp&semi;professionals in law&comma; business&comma; or medicine&period; <em>In other words&comma; they are not inheritors or chief executives like those in the &ldquo&semi;one percent&period;&rdquo&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Rose&rsquo&semi;s new report&comma; which shows substantial growth among the upper-middle class since 1979&comma; does not fit comfortably with either the right or left&rsquo&semi;s political narratives&period; Rose&rsquo&semi;s assessment suggests that a large American minority is thriving&comma; it also challenges the idea that upper- and lower-middle class voters are in the same boat&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The lower-middle class may have shrunk during Bush&&num;8217&semi;s presidency&comma; but it is growing under President Obama&period; The Pew Research Center found last month that the middle class is shrinking from both ends as the lower- and upper-middle classes grow&period; However the chart below seems to indicate the middle class is shrinking only from the the growth of the upper middle class&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Richard Reeves of the Brookings Institute warns that the &ldquo&semi;dangerous separation&rdquo&semi; between middle and upper-middle class families leads to social anxiety and resentment&period; For example&comma; it is not CEOs and wealthy heirs driving the prices of college and rent sky-high&comma; but the ever-expanding upper-middle class with enough money to foot the bill&period; This widespread feeling of resentment is one of the only reasons Sanders was able to earn so much support&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;It&rsquo&semi;s true the top 1&percnt; or top &period;1&percnt; have galloped away more quickly&comma;&rdquo&semi; explains Rose&comma; but ignoring the upper-middle class &ldquo&semi;gets in the way of an honest conversation about what&rsquo&semi;s happening with American inequality&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Editor&&num;8217&semi;s note&colon;<&sol;strong> There have always been classes and always stress between the classes&period; &nbsp&semi;This is nothing new&period; However in most countries historically the ability for the poor to move up to middle class and then to upper class is difficult if not impossible&period; America is the land of opportunity with perhaps the most mobility between the classes&period; With due respect to Mr&period; Reeves his data is great but his interpretation is straight from the Obama socialist playbook&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><center><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;punchingbagpost&period;com&sol;images&sol;wsj&lowbar;354634etyer&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"450" border&equals;"0" &sol;><&sol;center><&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version