Los Angeles Times

How the middle class is sinking

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

One of the great mysteries about the U.S. economy today is the discrepanc­y between the objective and subjective pictures we have of the middle class. The numbers say that the middle class is doing OK, or even improving its lot; middleclas­s families themselves say they’re being crushed under economic hobnail boots.

Two economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis have found the reason for the disconnect. It’s a matter of definition, not statistics, according to William R. Emmons and Bryan J. Noeth, whose analysis has just been published by the bank.

Their basic findings are that, yes, median income — that is, income in the middle of the distributi­on — has been stable, but the middle class genuinely is falling behind that mark. In America, “middle class” has been defined downward.

The disconnect comes from the different approaches of economists and

sociologis­ts to defining the middle class. Economists do it by the numbers, typically defining the middle class as households with income roughly 50% higher and lower than the median. Based on a median income of about $52,000 in 2013, the latest figure from the Census Bureau, that places the middle class in a range of $26,000 to $78,000.

Sociologis­ts, according to Emmons and Noeth, define the middle class “by evaluating demographi­c dimensions like race, education, occupation and status.”

They combine the approaches and solve the mystery. In effect, they’ve shifted from defining middle class as merely anyone earning a middle income, to defining the class as a fairly stable demographi­c group and looking at how it’s doing relative to middle income.

By defining the middle class demographi­cally, they find that families falling into the murky category of “neither rich nor poor” are under much more crushing economic pressure than the sheer numbers indicate.

“In effect,” they wrote, “the bar has been rising to remain near the middle of the income and wealth distributi­ons.”

Let’s start with the economists’ view of middle class. If it’s those at or around middle income, the position of those families hasn’t improved or deteriorat­ed much over time.

Adjusted for inflation, U.S. median income was about $48,000 in 1984, peaked at $56,900 in 1999, then settled back to $52,000 in 2013. The non-inflationa­djusted figure has been on a steady rise from $22,400 in 1984. Who are these families? Emmons and Noeth examined the characteri­stics of households headed by someone aged at least 40, since younger families may not have completed their education or settled into long-term earning and wealth patterns. They define middle-class households as those with nearaverag­e income and wealth, headed by a white or Asian with a high school diploma, no more or less, or by a black or Hispanic with a two- or four-year college degree.

These households are sandwiched between “Thrivers,” families with above-average income or wealth headed by someone with a two- or four-year college degree “who is non-Hispanic white or Asian,” and “Stragglers,” headed by someone without a high school degree or, if black or Hispanic, a high school diploma at most.

One laudable feature of this breakdown is that it puts the “socio-” into socioecono­mic by recognizin­g the effect of ethnicity on economic status. Whether because of discrimina­tion or other factors, the authors acknowledg­ed, black and Hispanic families “have significan­tly lower income and wealth than their similarly educated white and Asian counterpar­ts.”

By measuring the income and wealth of each of those groups against the economists’ median standard, the authors show exactly what’s happened to the economics of American households.

The median income of the demographi­cally defined middle class hasn’t been stable since the 1980s as the numbers suggest. It’s 16% lower now than it was in 1989; relative to the overall U.S. median, it’s down 21%.

To put it another way, the sociologic­ally defined middle-class family ranked at the 55th percentile of U.S. income earners in 1989; by 2013, it had fallen to the 45th percentile. If you’re riding in that car, it’s a steep drop.

The same trend shows up in wealth. The middle class has fallen short by about 24% of overall median wealth since 1989.

As for what all this means, the analysis by Emmons and Noeth underscore­d the importance of higher education in improving household status. That’s a crucial insight for policymake­rs, who have been complacent­ly watching public higher education get ruthlessly squeezed by state government­s and private higher ed priced out of the reach of the middle class.

Better-educated families, they noted, make better financial decisions, which further enhances their standing. And discrimina­tion and other factors that reduce educationa­l attainment by blacks and Hispanics also speed those households’ slide down the economic pole.

This item can be found online at lat.ms/1PgDuwy.

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 ?? Travis Heying TNS ?? THE MEDIAN INCOME of the demographi­cally defined middle class is 16% lower now than it was in 1989; relative to the overall U.S. median, it is down 21%. Above, President Obama promotes his agenda in January.
Travis Heying TNS THE MEDIAN INCOME of the demographi­cally defined middle class is 16% lower now than it was in 1989; relative to the overall U.S. median, it is down 21%. Above, President Obama promotes his agenda in January.

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