Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The real redistribu­tors

Republican­s keep sending more and more wealth to the wealthy, reports columnist HAROLD MEYERSON

- Harold Meyerson is editor-atlarge of The American Prospect and a columnist for The Washington Post.

Which is the more redistribu­tionist of our two parties? In recent decades, as Republican­s have devoted themselves with laser-like intensity to redistribu­ting America’s wealth and income upward, the evidence suggests the answer is the GOP.

The most obvious way that Republican­s have robbed from the middle to give to the rich has been the changes they have wrought in the tax code — reducing income taxes for the wealthy in the Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush tax cuts, and cutting the tax rate on capital gains to less than half the rate on the top income of upper-middle-class employees.

The less widely understood way that Republican­s have helped redistribu­te wealth to the already wealthy is by changing the rules. Markets don’t function without rules, and the rules that Republican policy makers have made since Reagan became president have consistent­ly depressed the share of the nation’s income that the middle class can claim.

Part of the intellectu­al sleight-of-hand that Republican­s employ in discussion­s of redistribu­tion is to reserve that term solely for government interventi­on in the market that redistribu­tes income downward. But markets redistribu­te wealth continuous­ly.

In recent decades, markets have redistribu­ted wealth from manufactur­ing to finance, from Main Street to Wall Street, from workers to shareholde­rs. Rules made by “pro-market” government­s (including those of “pro-market” Democrats) have enabled these epochal shifts.

Free trade with China helped hollow out manufactur­ing; the failure to regulate finance enabled Wall Street to swell; the opposition to labor’s efforts to reestablis­h an even playing field during organizing campaigns has all but eliminated collective bargaining in the private sector.

The conservati­ve counter to such liberal cavils is to assert that the market increases wealth, which will eventually descend on everyone as gentle rains from heaven. Decrying such Keynesian notions as unions or federally establishe­d minimum wages, hedge fund guru Andy Kessler recently argued in The Wall Street Journal that “it is workers’ productivi­ty that drives long-term wage gains, not workers’ wages that drive growth.”

But Mr. Kessler assumes — and this is the very essence of the “trickle-down” argument — that workers reap the rewards of productivi­ty gains. Believing and asserting that requires either ignorance or willful denial of economic history.

The only time in U.S. his-

tory when workers substantia­lly benefited from productivi­ty gains was the three decades that followed World War II, when median household income and productivi­ty gains both increased by 102 percent. Not coincident­ally, that was also the only period of genuine union power in U.S. history and the time when the tax code was at its most progressiv­e.

During the past quarter-century, as tax progressiv­ity was lessened and unions diminished, all productivi­ty gains have gone to the wealthiest 10 percent, according to research published by the National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1955, at the height of union strength, the wealthiest 10 percent received 33 percent of the nation’s personal income. In 2007, they received 50 percent, the Economic Policy Institute has calculated.

If that’s not redistribu­tion, I don’t know what is.

The problem is not just that everyone but the wealthy is claiming a smaller share of the nation’s income; the absolute amount of income they’re getting is declining as well. Median household income has dropped to the levels of the mid-1990s, according to Pew analysis of Census data, while the income of the 400 wealthiest Americans rose by a tidy $200 billion last year, according to data released this month by Forbes magazine.

If that’s not redistribu­tion, I don’t know what is.

Indeed, the United States has experience­d an upward redistribu­tion so profound that it affects far more than incomes. Whole sectors of the economy and regions of the country have been decimated by these economic changes.

The descent in all manner of social indexes is most apparent among poorly educated whites. Conservati­ve commentato­r Charles Murray has documented in his new book the decline in marriage rates and family stability within the white working class. And now, as The New York Times’ Sabrina Tavernise has reported, that decline includes longevity as well. While other Americans’ life expectancy has advanced, the life expectancy of whites without high school diplomas has declined since 1990 — by three years among men and five years among women.

The market is not just redistribu­ting income in the United States, then. It is redistribu­ting life.

S o, which party can claim credit for this — the real redistribu­tion this nation has experience­d over the past 30 years?

Many Democrats have been complicit in this calamity by their indifferen­ce to the consequenc­es of deregulati­on and trade. But the trophy for promoting the policies that have redistribu­ted wealth, family stability and longevity upward goes to the Republican­s, whose standardbe­arers are championin­g even more radical versions of these policies today.

A pro-life party? More like its opposite.

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