|
The
Death Of Horatio Alger
by Paul Krugman, The Nation, January 5, 2004
The other day I found myself reading a leftist rag that made outrageous
claims about America. It said that we are becoming a society in
which the poor tend to stay poor, no matter how hard they work;
in which sons are much more likely to inherit the socioeconomic
status of their father than they were a generation ago.
The name of the leftist rag? Business Week, which published an
article titled "Waking Up From the American Dream."
The article summarizes recent research showing that social mobility
in the United States (which was never as high as legend had it)
has declined considerably over the past few decades. If you put
that research together with other research that shows a drastic
increase in income and wealth inequality, you reach an uncomfortable
conclusion: America looks more and more like a class-ridden society.
And guess what? Our political leaders are doing everything they
can to fortify class inequality, while denouncing anyone who complains--or
even points out what is happening--as a practitioner of "class
warfare."
Let's talk first about the facts on income distribution. Thirty
years ago we were a relatively middle-class nation. It had not
always been thus: Gilded Age America was a highly unequal society,
and it stayed that way through the 1920s. During the 1930s and
'40s, however, America experienced what the economic historians
Claudia Goldin and Robert Margo have dubbed the Great Compression:
a drastic narrowing of income gaps, probably as a result of New
Deal policies. And the new economic order persisted for more than
a generation: Strong unions; taxes on inherited wealth, corporate
profits and high incomes; close public scrutiny of corporate management--all
helped to keep income gaps relatively small. The economy was hardly
egalitarian, but a generation ago the gross inequalities of the
1920s seemed very distant.
Now they're back. According to estimates by the economists Thomas
Piketty and Emmanuel Saez--confirmed by data from the Congressional
Budget Office--between 1973 and 2000 the average real income of
the bottom 90 percent of American taxpayers actually fell by 7
percent. Meanwhile, the income of the top 1 percent rose by 148
percent, the income of the top 0.1 percent rose by 343 percent
and the income of the top 0.01 percent rose 599 percent. (Those
numbers exclude capital gains, so they're not an artifact of the
stock-market bubble.) The distribution of income in the United
States has gone right back to Gilded Age levels of inequality.
Never mind, say the apologists, who churn out papers with titles
like that of a 2001 Heritage Foundation piece, "Income Mobility
and the Fallacy of Class-Warfare Arguments." America, they
say, isn't a caste society--people with high incomes this year
may have low incomes next year and vice versa, and the route to
wealth is open to all. That's where those commies at Business
Week come in: As they point out (and as economists and sociologists
have been pointing out for some time), America actually is more
of a caste society than we like to think. And the caste lines
have lately become a lot more rigid.
The myth of income mobility has always exceeded the reality: As
a general rule, once they've reached their 30s, people don't move
up and down the income ladder very much. Conservatives often cite
studies like a 1992 report by Glenn Hubbard, a Treasury official
under the elder Bush who later became chief economic adviser to
the younger Bush, that purport to show large numbers of Americans
moving from low-wage to high-wage jobs during their working lives.
But what these studies measure, as the economist Kevin Murphy
put it, is mainly "the guy who works in the college bookstore
and has a real job by his early 30s." Serious studies that
exclude this sort of pseudo-mobility show that inequality in average
incomes over long periods isn't much smaller than inequality in
annual incomes.
It is true, however, that America was once a place of substantial
intergenerational mobility: Sons often did much better than their
fathers. A classic 1978 survey found that among adult men whose
fathers were in the bottom 25 percent of the population as ranked
by social and economic status, 23 percent had made it into the
top 25 percent. In other words, during the first thirty years
or so after World War II, the American dream of upward mobility
was a real experience for many people.
Now for the shocker: The Business Week piece cites a new survey
of today's adult men, which finds that this number has dropped
to only 10 percent. That is, over the past generation upward mobility
has fallen drastically. Very few children of the lower class are
making their way to even moderate affluence. This goes along with
other studies indicating that rags-to-riches stories have become
vanishingly rare, and that the correlation between fathers' and
sons' incomes has risen in recent decades. In modern America,
it seems, you're quite likely to stay in the social and economic
class into which you were born.
Business Week attributes this to the "Wal-Martization"
of the economy, the proliferation of dead-end, low-wage jobs and
the disappearance of jobs that provide entry to the middle class.
That's surely part of the explanation. But public policy plays
a role--and will, if present trends continue, play an even bigger
role in the future.
Put it this way: Suppose that you actually liked a caste society,
and you were seeking ways to use your control of the government
to further entrench the advantages of the haves against the have-nots.
What would you do?
One thing you would definitely do is get rid of the estate tax,
so that large fortunes can be passed on to the next generation.
More broadly, you would seek to reduce tax rates both on corporate
profits and on unearned income such as dividends and capital gains,
so that those with large accumulated or inherited wealth could
more easily accumulate even more. You'd also try to create tax
shelters mainly useful for the rich. And more broadly still, you'd
try to reduce tax rates on people with high incomes, shifting
the burden to the payroll tax and other revenue sources that bear
most heavily on people with lower incomes.
Meanwhile, on the spending side, you'd cut back on healthcare
for the poor, on the quality of public education and on state
aid for higher education. This would make it more difficult for
people with low incomes to climb out of their difficulties and
acquire the education essential to upward mobility in the modern
economy.
And just to close off as many routes to upward mobility as possible,
you'd do everything possible to break the power of unions, and
you'd privatize government functions so that well-paid civil servants
could be replaced with poorly paid private employees.
It all sounds sort of familiar, doesn't it?
Where is this taking us? Thomas Piketty, whose work with Saez
has transformed our understanding of income distribution, warns
that current policies will eventually create "a class of
rentiers in the U.S., whereby a small group of wealthy but untalented
children controls vast segments of the US economy and penniless,
talented children simply can't compete." If he's right--and
I fear that he is--we will end up suffering not only from injustice,
but from a vast waste of human potential.
Goodbye, Horatio Alger. And goodbye, American Dream.
Source: http://www.thenation.com/
doc.mhtml?i=20040105&s=krugman
Related
Stories:
Those Who
Don't Get By
Rich-Poor
Gap Widening
|