30 Statistics That Prove the Elite Are Getting Richer, the Poor
Are Getting Poorer and the Middle Class Is Being Destroyed
Economic Collapse
Blog
Not everyone
has been doing badly during the economic turmoil of the last few
years. In fact, there are some Americans that are doing really,
really well. While the vast majority of us struggle, there is one
small segment of society that is seemingly doing better than ever.
This was reflected in
a recent article on CNBC in which it was noted that companies
that cater to average Americans are doing rather poorly right now
while companies that market luxury goods and services are generally
performing exceptionally well. So why aren't all American consumers
jumping on the spending bandwagon? Well, it seems that there are
a large number of Americans who either can't spend a lot of money
right now or who are very hesitant to. A stunningly high number
of Americans are still unemployed, and for many other Americans,
there is a very real fear that hard economic times will return soon.
On the other hand, there is a significant percentage of Americans
who are blowing money on luxury goods and services as if the economy
has fully turned around and it is time to let the good times roll.
So exactly what in the world is going on here?
Well, in 2010
life is very, very different depending on whether you are a "have"
or a "have not." The
recent article on CNBC referenced above described it this way....
Consumer
spending in the U.S. has turned into a tale of two cities in 2010,
with an entire segment of consumers splurging confidently on the
finer things in life, while another segment, concerned about unemployment
and with little or no discretionary income, spends only on bare
necessities.
So why is this
happening?
It is happening
because the rich are getting richer and they have plenty of money
to buy stuff and the poor are getting poorer and have less money
to spend than ever.
In case you
haven't been paying attention over the past couple of decades, what
we have in America today is a system that is designed to funnel
as much wealth into the hands of the elite as possible.
This isn't
capitalism that we have in America in 2010. Instead, what we have
created is a system where the laws are set up so that the power
elite and their big, dominant corporations always win.
Why do you
think so many of America's largest corporations pay so little in
taxes?
Why do you
think so many of them are showered with government subsidies, tax
breaks and bailouts?
It's not about
competition anymore.
It's about
rigging the game in your favor.
The power elite
and the giant corporations they control spend millions and millions
on lobbying and campaign contributions and they expect a big return
on that investment.
Let's take
a look at one example. Many people think that Barack Obama and the
Democrats are supposed to be anti-business, right?
Well then why
are some of Barack Obama's biggest donors the very same corporations
that are receiving giant bailouts, making record profits and paying
their employees billions in bonuses?
Goldman Sachs
was Barack Obama's second
biggest donor. Microsoft was number four. Citigroup was number
six. JPMorgan Chase was number seven. Time Warner was number eight.
Are you starting
to get the picture?
Every single
year, the U.S. Congress passes law after law after law that makes
it easier for big corporations to dominate and makes it easier for
the rich to get even richer.
America's economy
is not about competition anymore.
It is about
eliminating competition.
And unfortunately
for middle class Americans, the giant predator corporations that
now dominate our economy are realizing that they don't really need
nearly as many American workers anymore.
Instead, they
are slowly but surely shipping our jobs off to the other side of
the world where workers are willing to work for about a tenth as
much.
And yet we
still run out to the "big box" stores and fill up our carts with
a bunch of plastic crap made on the other side of the world by these
giant corporations.
Meanwhile,
those giant corporations are taking the profits they make out of
our communities and they are taking our jobs and are shipping them
overseas.
So in the final
analysis, is it any wonder why the income inequality gap is growing?
Without small
businesses having a legitimate chance to compete and without good
jobs for American workers, the middle class in America is going
to continue to get chewed up and spit out.
The following
are 30 statistics that prove that the elite are getting richer,
the poor are getting poorer and the middle class is being destroyed
in 2010....
The
Rich Are Getting Richer
1
As of 2007, the top 1 percent of all Americans was taking
home 24
percent of the national income. This was a level that had not
been seen since the days of the Great Depression.
2
Incomes have been growing in the United States, but those
at the very top of the pyramid have been gobbling up almost all
of the income growth. According
to Harvard Magazine, 66% of the income growth between
2001 and 2007 went to the top 1% of all Americans.
3
Even official government figures bear out the fact that the
rich are getting richer. An analysis of income-tax data by the Congressional
Budget Office a few years ago found that the top 1% of all American
households own
nearly twice as much of the corporate wealth as they did just
15 years ago.
4-
Most Americans have suffered during the last few years, but not
the boys and girls down on Wall Street. New York state Comptroller
Thomas DiNapoli says that Wall Street bonuses for 2009 were
up 17 percent when compared with 2008.
5
Even as the number of Americans living in poverty skyrockets,
the number of millionaires just keeps growing. In fact, the number
of millionaires in the United States rose
a whopping 16 percent to 7.8 million during 2009.
6
The amount of money some of these Wall Street hotshots are
making is incredible. Back in 2005, the top 25 hedge fund managers
earned a total of 9 billion dollars. That would be bad enough, but
even in these hard economic times the rich just keep getting richer.
One year after the recent financial collapse the top 25 hedge fund
managers earned a total of approximately $25
billion. That breaks down to an average of $1 billion each.
The truth is that the United States has been experiencing uneven
prosperity for quite some time and things just seem to get worse
with each passing year.

The
Poor Are Getting Poorer
7
Government anti-poverty programs are exploding in size in
response to the recent economic difficulties. USA Today is reporting
that a
record one in six Americans are now being served by at least
one government anti-poverty program.
8
Over
50 million Americans are on now Medicaid. That figure is up
more than 17 percent since the beginning of the recession.
9
The number of Americans in the food stamp program rose to
a
new all-time record of 40.8 million in May. That number is up
almost 50 percent since the beginning of the recession.
10
The number of Americans who cannot afford even the basic
necessities is absolutely staggering. A whopping 50 million Americans
could
not afford to buy enough food in order to stay healthy at some
point over the last year.
11
Compared to other industrialized nations, the United States
is doing very poorly. The U.S. poverty rate is
now the third worst among the developed nations tracked by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
12
The saddest part of this is what we are doing to our children.
According to one recent study, approximately 21 percent of all children
in the United States are
living below the poverty line in 2010.
13
But the American people cannot provide for their families
if they don't have jobs. Today there are not nearly enough jobs
for everyone. In 2010, it takes the average unemployed American
worker over
8 months to find a job.
14
Approximately 10
million Americans are currently receiving unemployment insurance,
which is a number that is nearly four times higher than what it
was at back in 2007.
15
The truth is that we are creating a permanent underclass
of Americans that cannot get jobs. The number of Americans receiving
long-term unemployment benefits has
increased over 60 percent in just the past year.
16
Increasingly, the wealth of the United States is being held
in fewer and fewer hands. One
study found that as of 2007, the bottom 80 percent of American
households held about 7% of the liquid financial assets.
17
It is not a good time to be living in "the bottom half" in
America. The size of "the pie" being divided up among those at the
low end of the wage scale is becoming really, really small. In fact,
the bottom 40 percent of all income earners in the United States
now collectively own
less than 1 percent of the nation’s wealth.
The
Middle Class Is Being Destroyed
18
Even those Americans that still do have decent jobs are seeing
their wealth fade rapidly. For example, U.S. families have
$6 trillion less in housing wealth than they did just three
years ago.
19
Home ownership used to be a sign that one had arrived in
the middle class, but in 2010 an increasing number of Americans
are finding out that they simply can't afford their homes anymore.
One
out of every seven mortgages were either delinquent or in foreclosure
during the first quarter of 2010.
20
The reality is that incomes have just not kept up with housing
costs. This has put an incredible amount of pressure on the middle
class. Just how much pressure? Well, only
the top 5 percent of all U.S. households have earned enough
additional income to match the rise in housing costs since 1975.
21
The debt binge middle class Americans have been on over the
past couple of decades has drained many of them completely dry,
and now more Americans than ever have bad credit scores. Over 25
percent of Americans now
have a credit score below 599, which means that they are a very
bad credit risk.
22
A rapidly rising number of Americans are actually choosing
bankruptcy as a way out of their financial problems. Nationwide,
bankruptcy filings rose
20 percent in the 12 month period ending this past June 30th.
23
The middle class manufacturing jobs that once defined so
many American cities are rapidly disappearing. Despite the fact
that the U.S. population has dramatically increased, less Americans
are employed in manufacturing today than
in 1950.
24
These days it seems like almost everyone is looking for a
good job, but very few people are finding them. According to one
recent survey, 28%
of all U.S. households have at least one member that is looking
for a full-time job.
25
Even many of those Americans that still have decent jobs
have been hit hard by this economic downturn. A
recent Pew Research survey found that 55 percent of the U.S.
labor force has experienced either unemployment, a pay decrease,
a reduction in hours or an involuntary move to part-time work since
the recession began.
26
The number of jobs that are evaporating is absolutely stunning.
According to one analysis, the United States has
lost a total of 10.5 million jobs since 2007.
27
So where are the jobs going? It doesn't take a genius to
figure it out. China's trade surplus (much of it with the United
States) climbed
140 percent in June compared to a year earlier.
28
The truth is that "globalism" and "free trade" have put middle
class American workers in direct competition with the cheapest labor
in the world. This is what middle class American workers must now
compete against: in China a garment worker makes approximately
86 cents an hour and in Cambodia a garment worker makes approximately
22 cents an hour.
29
Due to these difficult economic conditions, the middle class
is being squeezed as never before. According
to a poll taken in 2009, 61 percent of Americans "always or
usually" live paycheck to paycheck. That was up significantly from
49 percent in 2008 and 43 percent in 2007.
30
So what kind of future do our young people have in front
of them? Unfortunately, things don't look pretty. Many fresh college
graduates can't even get a job that will allow them to be independent.
One recent survey of last year's college graduates discovered that
80 percent moved right back home with their parents after graduation.
That was up significantly from 63 percent in 2006.
Reprinted
with permission from the Economic
Collapse Blog.
September
1, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 Economic
Collapse Blog
|