The U.S. Middle Class Is Turning Proletarian. By Joel Kotkin.
The U.S. Middle Class Is Turning Proletarian. By Joel Kotkin. Forbes, February 16, 2014. Also at New Geography, JoelKotkin.com.
Our Proletarian Middle Class. By Walter Russell Mead and Staff. The American Interest, February 19, 2014.
Kotkin:
The
biggest issue facing the American economy, and our political system, is the
gradual descent of the middle class into proletarian status. This process,
which has been going on intermittently since the 1970s, has worsened
considerably over the past five years, and threatens to turn this century into
one marked by downward mobility.
The
decline has less to do with the power of the “one percent” per se than with the
drying up of opportunity amid what is seen on Wall Street and in the White
House as a sustained recovery. Despite President Obama’s rhetorical devotion to
reducing inequality, it has widened significantly under his watch. Not only did
the income of the middle 60% of households drop between 2010 and 2012 while
that of the top 20% rose, the income of the middle 60% declined by a greater
percentage than the poorest quintile. The middle 60% of earners’ share of the
national pie has fallen from 53% in 1970 to 45% in 2012.
This
group, what I call the yeoman class — the small business owners, the suburban
homeowners , the family farmers or skilled construction tradespeople– is increasingly
endangered. Once the dominant class in America, it is clearly shrinking: In the
four decades since 1971 the percentage of Americans earning between two-thirds
and twice the national median income has dropped from 61% to 51% of the
population, according to Pew.
Roughly
one in three people born into middle class-households , those between the 30th
and 70th percentiles of income, now fall out of that status as adults.
Neither
party has a reasonable program to halt the decline of the middle class. Previous
generations of liberals — say Walter Reuther, Hubert Humphrey, Harry Truman,
Pat Brown — recognized broad-based economic growth was a necessary precursor to
upward mobility and social justice. However, many in the new wave of
progressives engage in fantastical economics built around such things as “urban
density” and “green jobs,” while adopting policies that restrict growth in
manufacturing, energy and housing. When all else fails, some, like Oregon’s
John Kitzhaber, try to change the topic by advocating shifting emphasis from
measures of economic growth to “happiness.”
Other
more ideologically robust liberals, like New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, call
for a strong policy of redistribution, something with particular appeal in a
city with one of the highest levels of income inequality in the country. Over
time a primarily redistributionist approach may improve some material
conditions, but is likely to help create a permanent underclass of dependents,
including part-time workers, perpetual students, and service employees living
hand to mouth, who can make ends meet only if taxpayers subsidize their
housing, transportation and other necessities.
Given
the challenge being mounted by de Blasio and hard left Democrats, one would
imagine that business and conservative leaders would try to concoct a response.
But for the most part, particularly at the national level, they offer little
more than bromides about low taxes, particularly for the well-heeled investor
and rentier classes, while some still bank on largely irrelevant positions on
key social issues to divert the middle class from their worsening economic
plight.
The
country’s rise to world preeminence and admiration stemmed from the fact that
its prosperity was widely shared. In the first decades after the Second World
War, when the percentage of households earning middle incomes doubled to 60%,
it was no mirage, but a fundamental accomplishment of enlightened capitalism.
In
contrast, the current downgrading of the middle class undermines the appeal of
the “democratic capitalism” that so many conservative intellectuals espouse. In
reality, capitalism is becoming less democratic: stock ownership has become
more concentrated, with the percentage of adult Americans owning stock the lowest since 1999 and a full 13 points less than 2007. The fact that poverty —
reflected in such things as an expansion of food stamp use — has now spread
beyond the cities to the suburbs, something much celebrated among urban-centric
pundits, is further confirmation of the yeomanry’s stark decline.
How our
political leaders respond to this challenge of downward mobility will define
the future of our Republic. Some see a future shaped by automation that would
“permanently end” what one author calls “the age of mass human labor,” allowing
productivity to rise without significant increases in wages. In this world, the
current American middle and working class would be economically passé.
One
would hope business would have a better option that would restart upward
mobility. Lower taxes on the investor class, less regulation of Wall Street,
and the mass immigration of cheap workers — all the rage among investment
bankers, tech oligarchs and those with inherited wealth — does not constitute a
compelling program of middle-class uplift. Nor does resistance, particularly
among the Tea Party, to make the human and physical infrastructure investment
that could help restore strong economic growth.
Fortunately
history gives us hope that this decline can be turned around. The early decades
of the Industrial Revolution saw a similar societal decline, as once
independent artisans and farmers became fodder for the factory lines. Divorce
and drunkenness grew as religious attendance failed. But a pattern of reform,
in Britain, America and even Germany, helped restore labor’s place in the
economy, and rapid growth provided the basis not only for the expansion of the
middle class, but remarkably improvements in its well-being.
A
pro-growth program today could take several forms that defy the narrow logic of
both left and right. We can encourage the growth of high-wage, blue-collar
industries such as construction, energy and manufacturing. We can also reform
taxes so that the burdens fall less on employers and employees, as opposed to
those who simply profit from asset inflation. And rather than impose huge
tuitions on students who might not finish with a degree that offers employment
opportunities, let’s place new emphasis on practical skills training for both
the new generation and those being left behind in this “recovery.” Most
importantly, the benefits of capitalism need be more widely shared if business
hopes to gain support from the middle class for their agenda.