"More important, in any capitalist society most people are bound to be part of the middle and working classes; public policy should focus on raising their standard of living, instead of raising their chances of getting rich. What made the U.S. economy so remarkable for most of the twentieth century was the fact that, even if working people never moved into a different class, over time they saw their standard of living rise sharply. Between the late nineteen-forties and the early nineteen-seventies, median household income in the U.S. doubled. That’s what has really changed in the past forty years. The economy is growing more slowly than it did in the postwar era, and average workers’ share of the pie has been shrinking. It’s no surprise that people in Washington prefer to talk about mobility rather than about this basic reality. Raising living standards for ordinary workers is hard: you need to either get wages growing or talk about things that scare politicians, like 'redistribution' and 'taxes.' But making it easier for some Americans to move up the economic ladder is no great triumph if most can barely hold on."
James Surowiecki in The New Yorker looks at class in America.
Saturday, March 01, 2014
"Over Time, the American Dream Has Become Increasingly Untethered from American Reality"
Labels:
class,
economics,
labor,
sociology,
twentieth century,
twenty-first century
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