Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Going Full Circle Back To Heyday Of Inequality

- Sam Pizzigati OTHERWORDS COLUMNIST SAM PIZZIGATI, AN INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES ASSOCIATE FELLOW, EDITS THE WEEKLY TOO MUCH. HIS LATEST BOOK IS THE RICH DON’T ALWAYS WIN: THE FORGOTTEN TRIUMPH OVER PLUTOCRACY THAT CREATED THE AMERICAN MIDDLE CLASS.

The future just keeps getting brighter for Americans with unique specialtie­s.

Randy Stearns has one such specialty: “home-tech integratio­n.” Stearns helps people install and maintain high-tech gadgets. But we’re not talking “Geek Squad” agents and hooking up home networks here. We’re talking rich people — and electronic toys that can cost more than houses.

Stearns offers “24/7 white glove” service for clients who typically pay up to $450,000 per project. Call Stearns and you, too, could end up with a home-tech system that sends out alerts whenever your wine cellar temperatur­e rises too high.

Annual sales in luxury home-tech integratio­n, Stearns estimates, are going to nearly double — to $3.7 billion — by 2016. He may be underestim­ating his potential market. America’s rich, two top economists revealed last week, are actually getting richer faster than almost anyone thought possible.

Last year’s report of Emmanuel Saez from the University of California Berkeley and Thomas Piketty from the Paris School of Economics, the incomes of America’s top 1 percent — families making over $393,941 — shot up just under 20 percent over the year before.

And the rest of America? The incomes of the nation’s bottom 99 percent rose all of 1 percent last year. Since 2009, bottom 99 percent incomes have barely bumped up at all, just 0.4 percent, after inflation.

Saez has a stat that puts the matter even more starkly. America’s top 1 percent, he notes, has “captured 95 percent” of all income gains over the first three years of the recovery.

This massive surge at the top has — no surprise — significan­tly hiked the share of national income that’s flowing to America’s most comfortabl­e.

For most of the middle of the 20th century, America’s most affluent 1 percent took in less than $1 of every $10 in national income. Those days now seem almost mythic ancient history.

In 2007, the year before the Great Recession hit, the share of the nation’s income the top 1 percent claimed hit 23.5 percent, nearly $1 out of every $4. This top 1 percent share did dip with the Great Recession, down to 18.1 percent in 2009. But the “recovery” — for the rich — has since then been almost total. Last year, the top 1 percent income share bolted back to 22.5 percent.

We have come, in effect, full circle back to the deeply unequal America of the late 1920s. That America’s deep economic divide ushered in the 1930s Great Depression.

We finally ended the Great Depression, Berkeley’s Saez points out, by nurturing institutio­ns that narrowed the gaps between America’s wealthiest and everyone else. The two most fundamenta­l of these institutio­ns: a vibrant labor movement that establishe­d new social norms about fair pay and a steeply progressiv­e tax system that subjected our wealthiest to still tax rates.

These two institutio­ns have both withered over recent decades, and the Great Recession hasn’t yet done much to reverse that withering.

Recent equalizing policy changes — like the higher federal income tax rates on the rich that came in earlier this year — remain, notes Saez, “modest relative to the policy changes that took place coming out of the Great Depression.”

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