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It's the Economy, Stupid -- but Not Just the Current Slowdown.
Robert B. Reich
Marketplace, December 5, 2007
According to new polls, the economy is the number 1 issue for American voters.
But that's not just because the economy is slowing and mortgages are harder
to come by. The real reason is middle-class families have exhausted the coping
mechanisms they've used for over three decades to get by on median wages that
are barely higher than they were in 1970, adjusted for inflation. Male wages
today are actually lower than they were then; the income of a young man in
his 30s is now 12 percent below that of a man his age three decades ago.
The first coping mechanism was moving more women into paid work. The percent
of working mothers with school-age children has almost doubled since 1970 --
from 38 percent to about 70 percent. Some parents are now even doing 24-hour
shifts, one on child duty while the other works. I call these families DINS
- double income, no sex.
When families couldn't paddle any harder, we started paddling longer. The
typical American now works two weeks more each year than 30 years ago. Compared
to any other advanced nation we're veritable workaholics, putting in 350 more
hours a year than the average European, more even than the notoriously industrious
Japanese.
As the tide of economic necessity continued to rise, we turned to the third
coping mechanism. We began taking equity out of our homes, big time. But now
that home prices are sinking for the first time in decades, this final coping
mechanism no longer keeps us afloat. As Moody's reported last week, defaults
on home equity loans have surged to the highest level this decade.
In short, it's the economy, stupid. But not just the current slowdown. The
underlying problem began around 1970. And any presidential candidate seeking
to address it will have to think bigger than stimulating the economy with tax
cuts or spending increases. The fact is, most Americans are still not prospering
in the high-tech, global economy that emerged three decades ago. Almost all
the benefits of economic growth since then have gone to a relatively small
number of people at the very top. The candidate who acknowledges this and comes
up with ways to truly spread prosperity will have a good chance of winning
over America's large and largely-anxious middle class.
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