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PUBLIC RADIO'S MARKETPLACE COMMENTARIES:
Democrats Should Talk About Inequality
Robert B. Reich
Marketplace, October 4, 2006
There’s a debate brewing in the Democratic Party about whether to talk
about the nation’s widening inequality. Some Democratic strategists say
that’s too risky. Most of America’s vast middle class wants and
expects to be rich some day themselves, they say. Talk about widening inequality
and you risk sounding too negative.
Well, I think conventional wisdom is wrong. In September’s Wall Street
Journal- NBC News poll, inequality ranked as the second most important economic
issue, right after the cost of gas and energy.
A few months ago when Congress was debating whether to raise the minimum wage,
polls showed 85 percent of the public in favor. And about 80 percent of Americans
polled by the Los Angeles Times and Bloomberg said CEOs are overpaid.
Remember what happened last year when Congress debated the Central American
Free Trade Act? Despite a heavy lobbying blitz from the White House and business,
it squeaked by with a margin of just two votes in the House. Polls show most
Americans no longer in favor of free trade because they think it’s hurting
the wages of average people.
The fact is, we haven’t experienced inequality on this scale since the
1920s – by some measures since the age of the Robber Barons in the 1890s.
Twenty five years ago, the richest one percent of Americans took home about
8 percent of total income. Now, they're taking home amost 20 percent. To be
in the top 1 percent today you've got to be taking home over $750,000 a year.
The American economy has been growing nicely. Corporate profits are up. The
Dow is back to its 2000 peak. Top executives are raking in eight-digit compensation
packages. But the paychecks of most people haven’t budged. Median household
earnings are actually below what they were in 1999. Meanwhile, the costs of
energy, health insurance, and college tuitions are skyrocketing.
The Bush White House wonders why most people aren't feeling better about the
economy. The chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors says there's lots
to cheer about. The Bushies attribute the glum mood to a glum media that stresses
the negative. If the White House were more in touch with what average people
are experiencing, they'd understand.
The American Dream is still very much alive. But most Americans are getting
worried it will stay just that -- a dream.
So don’t be surprised if you hear lots of Democratic candidates and
maybe even a few Republicans talk about restoring fairness to the economy.
That means rolling back the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, raising the minimum
wage, lifting the ceiling on earnings subject to Social Security payroll taxes,
and cutting taxes on the middle class. It also means making health insurance
and college affordable again.
The new political motto: It’s fairness, stupid.
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