The Fake Economic Boom

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The Fake Economic Boom

Post by Einhander Sn0m4n »

The Boom Was a Bust For Ordinary People
t begins to sound a bit naughty -- all this talk about the need to "stimulate" the economy, as if we were discussing how to make a porn film. I don't mean to trivialize our economic difficulties or the need for effective government intervention, but we have to face a disconcerting fact: For years now, that strange stimulus-crazed beast, the economy, has been going its own way, increasingly disconnected from the toils and troubles of ordinary Americans.

The economy, for example, has been expanding, at least until now, and growth is supposed to guarantee general well-being. As long as the gross domestic product grows, World Money Watch's Web site assures us, "so will business, jobs and personal income."

But hellooo, we've had brisk growth for the past few years, as the president has tirelessly reminded us, only without those promised increases in personal income, at least not for the poor and the middle class. According to a study just released by the Economic Policy Institute, real wages actually fell last year. Growth, some of the economists are conceding in perplexity, has been "decoupled" from widely shared prosperity.

I first began to sense this in the boom years of the late 1990s, when I was working in entry-level jobs for my book "Nickel and Dimed." While the stock market soared and fortunes were being made in the time it takes to say "IPO," my $6-to-$8-an-hour co-workers lunched on hot dog buns because that was all they could afford and, in some cases, fretted about whether they could find a safe place to sleep.

Growth is not the only economic indicator that has let us down. In the past five years, America's briskly rising productivity has been the envy of much of the world. But again, there's been no corresponding increase in most people's wages. It's not supposed to be this way, of course. Economists have long believed that some sort of occult process would intervene and adjust wages upward as people worked harder and more efficiently.

We like to attribute our high productivity to technological advances and better education. But a revealing 2001 study by the consulting firm McKinsey & Co. also credited America's productivity growth to "managerial . . . innovations" and cited Wal-Mart as a model performer, meaning that our productivity also relies on fiendish schemes to extract more work for less pay. Yes, you can generate more output per apparent hour of work by falsifying time records, speeding up assembly lines, doubling workloads and cutting back on breaks. That may look good from the top, but at the middle and the bottom, it can feel a lot like pain.

And what about the unemployment rate? The old liberal certainty was that "full employment" would create a workers' paradise, with higher wages and enhanced bargaining power for the little guy and gal. But we've had nearly full employment, or at least an official unemployment rate of under 5 percent, for years now, without the predicted gains. What the old liberals weren't counting on was a depressed minimum wage, weak unions and a witch's brew of management strategies to hold wages and salaries down.

So thoroughly is the economy decoupled from ordinary experience that according to a CNN poll, 57 percent of Americans thought we were already in a recession a month ago. Economists may complain that this is only because the public is ignorant of the technical definition of a recession, which specifies at least two consecutive quarters of negative growth. But most of the public employs the more colloquial definition of a recession, which is hard times. And -- far removed from whatever happens on Wall Street, the Nikkei, Dax, or the curiously named FTSE -- most Americans have been living in their own personal recession for years.

I could see this when I was doing research for a book on white-collar unemployment in 2004. Although the economy was officially on an upturn, I met laid-off people who'd been searching for a job for more than a year and often ended up -- after selling their homes and borrowing from relatives -- taking low-wage work as big-box sales clerks or even janitors.

In the months ahead, we can expect the hard times to spread. Citigroup has announced plans to eliminate 21,000 jobs; investment banks in general will shed 40,000. The mortgage industry is in a meltdown; Business Wire predicts a 37 percent increase in the number of companies planning layoffs this year. This is what a stimulus package needs to address: the persistent and growing struggles of the middle class and the working class, which is increasingly conterminous with the working poor.

There are reasons for doing so other than compassion. The chronically poor and the battered middle class have become a tripwire in the American economy -- generating defaults on debts, depressed consumption and global market turmoil.

Consider how we got into the current credit crisis in the first place, through defaults on subprime mortgages. These went to plenty of affluent folks and have wreaked havoc in gated communities. But overall, subprime loans were designed for, and snapped up by, the poor. According to a recent study from United for a Fair Economy, 55 percent of subprime loans went to African Americans and 17 percent to whites. Among whites, they went far more frequently to low-income people than to the wealthy -- 39 percent compared with 24 percent. Hence the subprime industry's noble boasts about providing the opportunity for home ownership to people who might otherwise have been excluded from it.

And why were so many Americans poor enough to turn to subprime mortgages and other dodgy credit schemes? The chief reasons are low wages and job insecurity. Chronically low wages afflict about 25 to 30 percent of the population -- more than twice the 12 percent the federal government counts as "poor." And even earnings in the six-figure range can be canceled overnight when an employer downsizes or outsources, leaving a family without income or health insurance.

For years now, we've had a solution, or at least a substitute, for low wages and unreliable jobs: easy credit. Payday loans, rent-to-buy furniture and exorbitant credit card interest rates for the poor were just the beginning. In its May cover story on "The Poverty Business," BusinessWeek documented the stampede to lend money to the people who could least afford to pay the interest on it: Buy your dream home! Refinance your house! Financiamos a todos! It wasn't just the bottom-feeders that joined the unseemly frenzy to lend to the poor; big companies, such as Wells Fargo and Countrywide Financial, plunged right in. But somehow, no one bothered to figure out where the poor were going to get the money to pay for all the money they were borrowing.

When personal finances are squeezed hard enough, you have the possibility of a genuine recession. People buy less, so growth declines to the point where even the economic overclass has to sit up and take notice. We saw the beginnings of that in the last Christmas season, which even Wal-Mart survived only through perilously deep discounting.

Not that we hadn't been warned. A century ago, Henry Ford realized that his company would only prosper if his own workers earned enough to buy Fords. But, like Wal-Mart, too many of our employers today haven't figured out that their cruelly low wages would eventually curtail their own growth and profits.

Government intervention, whether short-term or long-term, needs to get to the heart of this problem by offering a hand to the poor and the unemployed. Until the House capitulated to Bush two weeks ago, Democrats seemed to be standing solidly behind a stimulus package that would include an increase in food-stamp allotments and an extension of unemployment benefits, both of which are screamingly obvious measures. Current unemployment benefits last just 26 weeks in most states and end up covering only a third of people who are laid off. Food stamps are in even shabbier shape, with an allotment amounting to about $1 per meal. Nothing could be more stimulating than putting money in the hands of those who will spend it quickly.

But you can't jump-start a car that lacks a working battery. We need less titillating talk about "stimulus" and more commitment to some fundamental repairs -- higher wages, a real safety net and a return to progressive taxation among them. The challenge isn't just to prop up stock prices but to rebuild an economy in which everyone shares the good times -- and no one is consigned to a permanent recession.
So in essence, the growth in the economy the past seven years was fake and we've been in essentially a permanent recession all along.

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Post by The Dark »

I recall reading an analysis from 2002 that stated that for the bottom 90% of America, there's been no growth since 1977 (actually about a 1% decline in real income). All the growth in the economy has been for the top 10%, especially the top 1%.
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Post by Darth Wong »

The Dark wrote:I recall reading an analysis from 2002 that stated that for the bottom 90% of America, there's been no growth since 1977 (actually about a 1% decline in real income). All the growth in the economy has been for the top 10%, especially the top 1%.
Hell, the federal government even admits that, if you know where to look (the CIA World Factbook pointed that out a long time ago).

The problem is that we have been worshipping at the altar of Maximum Economic Growth for too long. People think the economy is working wonderfully if the growth rate is high, and they don't give a damn whether that growth is going to 100%, 50%, 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the population.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

The Dark wrote:I recall reading an analysis from 2002 that stated that for the bottom 90% of America, there's been no growth since 1977 (actually about a 1% decline in real income). All the growth in the economy has been for the top 10%, especially the top 1%.
I've seen this argument a lot, but it fails to take into consideration the fact that the US labor force has grown substantially during that timeframe. And not just from population growth: women began entering the workforce in large numbers at about that time, and to a lesser extent minorities who had been discouraged from working were also able to join the labor force in a more meaningful way. It's true that an individual worker's real salary has not changed substantially since then, but real household income is up significantly just because so many women now work in meaningful jobs.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

It's true that an individual worker's real salary has not changed substantially since then, but real household income is up significantly just because so many women now work in meaningful jobs.
Really? It may be so because many women work - the household income rises, say, 1,7 times, but so do fixed expenses rise, and they rise faster and greater than the rise in household income offered by working wives.
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Post by Darth Wong »

So household incomes have risen only because so many households are basically working twice as hard by having two wage-earners instead of one? And this says good things about the kind of income drawn by the middle class? Please tell me you're joking, MoO.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Darth Wong wrote:So household incomes have risen only because so many households are basically working twice as hard by having two wage-earners instead of one? And this says good things about the kind of income drawn by the middle class? Please tell me you're joking, MoO.
It represents a shift in the economy. Allowing women into the workplace is an inarguably good thing--it allows for better gender equality, among other things. And real wages have remained stable throughout this, despite the HUGE increase in the size of the labor force. Sorry, but that is a good thing--no one is worse off than they were in the 1970's, and households that CHOOSE to have both parents work have more income.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Stas Bush wrote:
It's true that an individual worker's real salary has not changed substantially since then, but real household income is up significantly just because so many women now work in meaningful jobs.
Really? It may be so because many women work - the household income rises, say, 1,7 times, but so do fixed expenses rise, and they rise faster and greater than the rise in household income offered by working wives.
Uh... real wages are adjusted for increases in fixed expenses, at least proportionally to the spending patterns of average people. And the fact that real wages have remained stable means that a household that has two parents working now has around double the real income that it had earlier (perhaps a touch less because of taxes).

The net result is that even though real wages aer similar to what they were in 1970, HOUSEHOLD income is significantly higher, and there's much greater equality in access to job markets than there was in the 1970's. You and DW don't view this as a good thing? If you have one person work, you have about the same real income that you would have had in the 1970's, but now your spouse can also choose to go to work if she so chooses and also pull in a real wage comparable to what you would have been earning in 1970? You don't see that as an improvement in the economy?
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Post by K. A. Pital »

If you have one person work, you have about the same real income that you would have had in the 1970's
No, a depressed one.

Look here:
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What does this say? Not only is the single-person income stable (down 2%), fixed expenses shoot up. Home mortage and insurance, for example.
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

In case people forgot, it’s NOT NORMAL to have a big well off middle class. Such a thing has only existed for about 100-75 years and only then in the wealthiest nations. It’s not surprising at all to me that it’s slowly being squeezed out of existence as standards of living are pushed ever higher.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Stas Bush wrote:No, a depressed one.

Look here:

What does this say? Not only is the single-person income stable (down 2%), fixed expenses shoot up. Home mortage and insurance, for example.
1. A two percent change in real income over a 30 year period is WELL within the margin of error for that measurement.
2. Fixed expenses shoot up? This is supposed to disprove my statement that "real" wages take into account the change in fixed expesnes, as well as variable ones.

Here is the graph of non-managerial US personnel's REAL wages over time.

I'm not seeing a big problem, here, although admittedly I haven't scrutinized the methodology of the chart you posted.
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Post by Surlethe »

I was reading a column by George Will the other day where he claimed the middle-class shrinking is due almost entirely to middle-class citizens moving to the upper class -- i.e. (IIRC), the percentage of the population that's poor has stayed the same, the middle class has shrunk, and the upper class has increased. If anyone wants, I can dig it up, but I given that the column was in print I'd be surprised if he were outright lying about that.
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Post by Surlethe »

Master of Ossus wrote:Here is the graph of non-managerial US personnel's REAL wages over time.

I'm not seeing a big problem, here, although admittedly I haven't scrutinized the methodology of the chart you posted.
Your link's broken.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Surlethe wrote:Your link's broken.
Hmmm... it works for me.

As for the chart that Stas Bush posted, so what?

Fixed expenses have gone up significantly since the 1970's as a fraction of income (although I have NO idea how they defined "fixed expenses"), but since real wage has dropped by two percent, this must mean that their variable expenses have dropped almost precisely proportionally--real wages already account for the "market bundle" of goods, and that includes changes in the fraction of income that a typical family spends on things like home loans. It's interesting in that the things that people spend money on have changed, but in and of itself a change in the fraction of money someone spends on fixed expenses and variable ones says nothing about the well-being of the person involved--that's given by changes in real income.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Fixed expenses shoot up? This is supposed to disprove my statement that "real" wages take into account the change in fixed expesnes, as well as variable ones.
Which expenses do "real wages" include? Taxes? :? I'm just curious how real income are adjusted for expense - we were told that in economy, you have real and nominal wages. Nominal wages are simply the amount of money paid. Real wages are adjusted for inflation. But how can they be complete with fixed expenses, and what exactly do those fixed expenses include then?

Could you shed some light on the methodology?
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Post by Surlethe »

Master of Ossus wrote:
Surlethe wrote:Your link's broken.
Hmmm... it works for me.
Oh, I see. Simply clicking the link doesn't work, but if you go to the url, it's fine.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Stas Bush wrote:
Fixed expenses shoot up? This is supposed to disprove my statement that "real" wages take into account the change in fixed expesnes, as well as variable ones.
Which expenses do "real wages" include? Taxes? :? I'm just curious how real income are adjusted for expense - we were told that in economy, you have real and nominal wages. Nominal wages are simply the amount of money paid. Real wages are adjusted for inflation. But how can they be complete with fixed expenses, and what exactly do those fixed expenses include then?

Could you shed some light on the methodology?
It doesn't adjust for taxes (how could it?). The methodology is conceptually pretty simple, but the details are complex. The US uses a chain-weighted system that averages two measures of inflation. Essentially, you pick a market basket that consists of goods and services consumed by ordinary people each year. Then you track the price

of those goods and services over time, such that you can calculate the price of the "basket" that consumers bought last year had it been purchased last year, and the price of the "basket" that consumers bought last year if they had purchased it this year.

The US uses the chain-weighting system to mitigate some biases that are present in the system that most other countries use. There are, though, some flaws with the system that economists have pretty much agreed not to argue about, though:

1. It ignores the fact that products like computers, cars, etc. get better as time goes on. My first desktop computer, for example, cost me thousands of dollars in the 1980's, but has a fraction of the processing power as the $1500 laptop that I'm typing this on.
2. It doesn't actually get rid of the original biases--it just mitigates them. For instance, people can and do adjust their market basket depending on the price of the goods and services that they buy. The chain-weighted index allows them to do this (e.g., they're not "locked in" to the market basket they had in 1970 when you try to make comparisons between then and now). The problem with that method is that it ignores a consumer's ability to substitute goods as their prices fluctuate, but the alternative system (fix prices) creates the potentially worse problem in that it assumes that consumer substitution is costless when we know that it isn't.

Since the fixed costs that are listed in your chart--health insurance, day care, housing, and cars, are pretty common, they'll definitely be in the government's basket of goods (which actually goes well beyond what any individual consumer would purchase in a year), and they'll be weighted to the average consumer's spending.
Surlethe wrote:
Master of Ossus wrote:
Surlethe wrote:Your link's broken.
Hmmm... it works for me.
Oh, I see. Simply clicking the link doesn't work, but if you go to the url, it's fine.
That is weird. Do you think I should break the link? Would that make it easier?
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Post by K. A. Pital »

But how would an increase from 0 to a sum be weighed? Earlier some of those costs may have not even existed, so they couldn't have been counted in the consumer product range, could they? :?
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Post by Edi »

MoO, if wages have remained stable, how the hell does that mean that the actual disposable income has remained so, given that prices have risen in the meanwhile and at a faster rate than the wages?
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Post by Broomstick »

Master of Ossus wrote:Sorry, but that is a good thing--no one is worse off than they were in the 1970's
>cough<

As someone who is unemployed and has no health insurance, that's a tough one to swallow. As a matter of fact, right now I AM worse off than the 1970's
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Post by brianeyci »

Edi wrote:MoO, if wages have remained stable, how the hell does that mean that the actual disposable income has remained so, given that prices have risen in the meanwhile and at a faster rate than the wages?
I think his argument is that shit like computers, and technology gives better bang for your buck so comparing 2007 with 1977 means you live a better life in 2007. I'm sure there's a better selection of food too, better selection of everything.

Of course, the point isn't that people in 1977 live better lives than people in 2007. Obviously when people compare they are comparing people in the same time span -- rich or middle class with poor in 1977, and the gap, and then comparing the gap between rich and middle class or poor in 2007. The gap is what is being compared, not the actual lifestyle. You sure can buy more kinds of clothes, cheaper shit from China and obviously better crap in DVD's, high definition televisions. But when the rich increase their wealth by obscene amounts every year, the gap is what's the concern. And that's not even bringing in the question of job security.

Having both parents work is one of those things that won't show its consequences for a generation, just like cutting education or shitty healthcare. Obviously short-term retard thinking believes it to be a boon, yay for girl power, but quality parenting is a full-time job. I'm sure Mike would have some choice words for people who argue Rebecca should get her ass out and work rather than take care of his kids.

As for the non-exstence of middle class being not real in most of human history, I don't think that's a valid point. If the middle class existed for 75-100 years as someone claimed, I see no reason it couldn't continue forever, if the right central planning and regulation is done. Take a look at the middle class in ancient China, the Imperial examinations. It is not simply wealth that makes someone middle class or greater, but power and prestige, and a set of exams to catapult yourself to the top of government doesn't exist in today's Western governments. Education is not even a fucking requirement to become a politician.
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Post by Korto »

I'm curious. As I read Stas Bush's "Generational Shift" chart, if you subtract Fixed Expenses from After-Tax Income then with one person working in the 70's you were left with $19,560, while with 2 people working in 2004 you were left with $18,140; that is, you were left with less money for doing twice the amount of work.
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Post by Starglider »

When I mentioned the possibility of a serious recession to a few (rich) people I know in the finance and management consulting sectors, I was getting a vague disturbing impression; that they think the 'real' economy will be fine but that the mechanisms that allowed poor people to pretend they were wealthy will be out of commission for at least a few years. Although I've been well aware of the widening wealth gap issue for years the fact, the existence of this particular attitude hadn't quite clicked until I read this post.
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Post by Stravo »

As a personal observation, our last 5 years of raises did not or just covered COLA and this year's raises are certainly below COLA, as in a full percentage point below COLA so at least in this office, granted our salaries are higher than the average, we have not kept pace with Cost of Living over the last 5 years.
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Terralthra
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Post by Terralthra »

brianeyci wrote: Having both parents work is one of those things that won't show its consequences for a generation, just like cutting education or shitty healthcare. Obviously short-term retard thinking believes it to be a boon, yay for girl power, but quality parenting is a full-time job. I'm sure Mike would have some choice words for people who argue Rebecca should get her ass out and work rather than take care of his kids.
This is a really strange point. The idea of one parent not working is very recent as far as societal trends go. It's easy to look back 100-200 years and see that women didn't go outside the house to a job, but that ignores that women, by and large, spent the day working in the house. Things like making and mending clothes, preparing the meals for the day, and the upkeep of the house took a huge amount of time and effort in the days before the industrial revolution and especially the shift to a mass market consumer economy in the post WWII era.

One could just as easily argue that the model of one parent not working so they could take care of the kids, and only take care of the kids, was a short-term experiment during the 50s-70s which proved to be unrealistic in a modern economy. If the wife's going to buy the food and buy the clothes instead of making them herself as used to, of course that raises expenses.
brianeyci wrote: As for the non-exstence of middle class being not real in most of human history, I don't think that's a valid point. If the middle class existed for 75-100 years as someone claimed, I see no reason it couldn't continue forever, if the right central planning and regulation is done. Take a look at the middle class in ancient China, the Imperial examinations. It is not simply wealth that makes someone middle class or greater, but power and prestige, and a set of exams to catapult yourself to the top of government doesn't exist in today's Western governments. Education is not even a fucking requirement to become a politician.
Would that be the ancient China in which the vast majority of people were peasant rice farmers living in abject poverty and bare subsistence living? This isn't an unlimited resource game, China had a stable middle and upper class largely because it had a huge population of people working their asses off for subsistence to feed the upper classes.
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