The Columbus Dispatch

Surging stocks lift US wealth, still trail ’07 peak

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — Surging stock prices and steady increases in home values powered American household wealth to $96.9 trillion this fall, The Federal Reserve said Thursday. The gains, however, aren’t widely shared.

U.S. wealth has made a remarkable comeback since the recession, when it plummeted more than $10 trillion to $56.2 trillion. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation or population growth, nor are they broken out by income levels.

Edward Wolff, an economist at New York University, uses other Fed data to calculate figures for average and median households. The median is the point where half of households are richer, and half poorer, and gives a better sense of how typical families have fared.

In 2016, the latest figures available, median household wealth was still 34 percent below its pre-recession, 2007 level. Average household wealth, meanwhile, fully recovered from the downturn and was 7 percent higher last year. The average figure is pulled up by very wealthy families.

“The middle class is still way below where it was almost 10 years ago,” Wolff said. “What you’re seeing is wealth flowing to the very top even more so than in the Great Recession.”

The Fed’s latest figures come as Congress is considerin­g a tax cut plan that would reduce taxes on corporatio­ns and would mostly benefit wealthier taxpayers. Yet the Fed’s Thursday report shows that U.S. corporatio­ns currently have a hefty $2.4 trillion in cash.

The Trump administra­tion and GOP leaders in Congress argue that cutting corporate taxes will encourage companies to spend more on machinery, computers and other equipment. Those investment­s, in turn, should make workers more productive and lead to higher wages.

Many economists say that most of the benefit of a corporate tax cut flows to wealthier investors, through dividends and share buybacks.

And opponents of the corporate tax cut also argue that companies’ huge cash stockpiles — which have grown nearly 16 percent since 2015 — demonstrat­e that businesses already have the money they need to invest.

Supporters, however, respond that a tax cut will still encourage business spending by making future investment more profitable.

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