Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Mark Gongloff — All The Wealth The Middle Class Accumulated After 1940 Is Gone



The middle-class share of American wealth has been shrinking for the better part of three decades and recently fell to its lowest level since 1940, according to a new studyby economists Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley, and Gabriel Zucman of the London School of Economics….
In this case, "middle class" is defined rather expansively as the bottom 90 percent of all Americans. "Wealth" is the total of home equity, stock and bond holdings, pension plans and other assets, minus debt. As such assets are mostly owned by mid- to higher-income households -- and considering most Americans define themselves as "middle-class" -- it seems reasonable to use the bottom 90 percent as a proxy for the "middle class."…
Debt has been the big force driving net wealth lower for the middle class, according to Saez and Zucman. Brief bubbles in stock and home prices in the 1990s and 2000s only temporarily offset the steady, depressing rise in mortgage, student-loan, credit-card and other debts for the bottom 90 percent.
The Huffington Post
All The Wealth The Middle Class Accumulated After 1940 Is Gone
Mark Gongloff

1 comment:

Roger Erickson said...

Most of the initiative too.

And the audacity.

And the education.

And the ingenuity.

Soap operas, talk shows, console games, and Angry Birds.

Weepin' Electorates on a Schtick!

WWMES?

what would marriner eccles say?
or Ben Franklin?