The Denver Post

The “hollowing” of the middle class

- By Robert J. Samuelson

We’ll be hearing a lot about the middle class in the coming months. That’s one sure bet for 2016, as both parties compete for votes. What’s less sure is whether we’ll get an accurate assessment of the middle class’ condition. By now, the convention­al wisdom is familiar: The top 1 percent has skimmed most income gains for itself, producing decades of stagnant living standards for most Americans. Wall Street has slaughtere­d Main Street.

Now comes a report from the Pew Research Center that paints a more complex picture. It’s not that the Pew study contradict­s all the convention­al wisdom. It finds (as have others) that economic inequality is increasing. One of the study’s main conclusion­s is that the middle class is being hollowed out, as more Americans find themselves in either upper- or lower-income households. The extremes grow at the expense of the center.

In 1971, about 61 percent of adults lived in middle-income households (defined as threeperso­n households with incomes from $41,869 to $125,608 in today’s dollars). By 2014, that share had dropped to 50 percent. Meanwhile, the share of low-income households (those with incomes of $41,869 or less) grew from 25 percent to 29 percent, and the share of upper-income households (incomes above $125,608) increased from 14 percent to 21 percent.

But the study convincing­ly refutes the notion that the living standards of most Americans had stagnated for many decades. Pew calculated household incomes, adjusted for inflation, all along the economic spectrum and found that, until the early 2000s, most households reaped slow but steady increases. Growing inequality did not siphon off all gains for the non-rich. Here’s how Pew describes this period:

“Households typically experience­d double-digit gains in each of the three decades from 1970 to 2000. Middle-income household income increased by 13 percent in the 1970s, 11 percent in the 1980s and 12 percent in the 1990s. Lower-income households had gains of 13 percent in the 1970s, 8 percent in the 1980s and 15 percent in the 1990s. Upper-income households registered a 10 percent gain in the 1970s [and] ... 18 percent in both the 1980s and 1990s.”

What’s happened since, of course, is that the Great Recession erased some of these gains. Pew estimates that household incomes dropped to levels of the late 1990s. That’s a steep decline. Still, it left intact most gains achieved since 1970. In 2014, typical middle-income households had incomes 34 percent higher than in 1970; in 2000, the advance had been 40 percent.

Indeed, these figures probably understate actual gains. Like many others, the Pew study relies on pre-tax cash incomes. It ignores taxes and non-cash government transfer programs to the poor (food stamps, Medicaid) and employer-provided fringe benefits for workers (mainly health insurance and vacations). These blunt inequality and raise recipients’ living standards.

The good news is this: Despite the top 1 percent’s outsized incomes, this hasn’t yet shut down the upward march of living standards for most of the population. We’ve mistaken what is plausibly a onetime setback — the response to the Great Recession — for long-term stagnation.

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