America’s
middle classes are no longer coping
Financial Times | Jan. 29, 2008
By
By Robert Reich
t is an election year and the US
economy is in peril of falling into recession or worse. Not
surprisingly, Washington is abuzz with plans to prevent it.
President George W. Bush has proposed a $150bn stimulus package and
all the main presidential candidates are offering similar measures,
including middle-class tax cuts and increased spending on
infrastructure.
Ben Bernanke and the Federal
Reserve have reduced interest rates another three-quarters of a
point. But none of these fixes will help much because they do not
deal with the underlying anxieties now gripping American voters. The
problem lies deeper than the current slowdown and transcends the
business cycle.
The fact is, middle-class families
have exhausted the coping mechanisms they have used for more than
three decades to get by on median wages that are barely higher than
they were in 1970, adjusted for inflation. Male wages today are in
fact lower than they were then: the income of a young man in his 30s
is now 12 per cent below that of a man his age three decades ago.
Yet for years now, America’s middle class has lived beyond its pay
cheque. Middle-class lifestyles have flourished even though median
wages have barely budged. That is ending and Americans are beginning
to feel the consequences.
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