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American Prosperity Has Become American Poverty

More than 40 percent of American households cannot afford rent, transportation, childcare, or a cellphone, according to a new study from the United Way Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed Project, obtained by Axios. U.S. households are still struggling despite living during the second longest “recovery” in our nation’s history.

United Way ALICE Project Director Stephanie Hoopes, Ph.D., told Axios, “based on 2016 data, there were 34.7 million households in that group — double the 16.1 million that are in actual poverty.” Combining for almost 51 million American households essentially living in poverty in the land of the American Dream.

Millions of Americans have been left behind during this age of globalization and forced into poverty. Trump won the presidency because these deplorables need something different. And now it turns out these Americans Hillary Clinton dismissed and took for granted are much larger than we thought, despite the claims that the U.S. economy is on solid ground and the stock market trades at near record highs.

These households with adults who are working but not earning enough, unable to afford a middle-class lifestyle but not technically living in poverty include the 66% of Americans making less than $20 an hour, or $40,000 per year if working full time.

To make matters worse for these financially strapped Americans, rent, gas, and food are rising far too fast. Monetary policy today encourages inflation while ignoring the detrimental effects it has on the cost of life’s essentials (housing, food, energy). With wages barely budging, the Fed is aiming for prices to go up at least 2 percent each year, ideally 2.5 percent per year. Inflation was 2.46 percent in April 2018 and ended in 2017 at 2.13 percent. Wage growth has picked up some pace, lifting the average annual increase to 2.7 percent in March of this year. Still, this matters little if almost 30 percent of the labor force is not working or looking for work at all. The civilian labor force participation rate has remained below 63 percent since the start of 2014.

The rent is too damn high. According to Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, 40.9 million Americans, both homeowners, and renters, spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing. This number also includes 19.8 million Americans who spend over half of their income for housing.  

Piling on these depressing economic realities, the U.S. government is spending money it doesn’t have like a drunken sailor on shore leave.

Goldman Sachs first warned us a few months ago that the U.S. fiscal trajectory was dire. “US fiscal policy is on an unusual course” with the budget deficit expected to keep rising over Trump’s next few years in office following his deficit-exploding policy to slash taxes and boost spending which will result in a federal debt/GDP ratio of around 85 percent of GDP by 2021.

The rising interest that needs to be paid on the Federal Debt is the biggest risk of all. This will send the U.S. government into “uncharted territory,” according to Goldman.

Back in February, Goldman stated: “… we project that, if Congress continues to extend existing policies, including the recently enacted tax and spending legislation, federal debt will slightly exceed 100% of GDP and interest expense will rise to around 3.5% of GDP, putting the US in a worse fiscal position than the experience of the 1940s or 1990s.”

Today, Goldman has doubled down on its dark assessment of America’s fiscal situation, writing that “the US fiscal outlook is not good,” also predicting that the U.S. fiscal deficit will double from $1 trillion over the next 12 months to $2 trillion by 2028, jumping to a near record 7 percent of GDP. Exponentially increasing entitlement programs are the main driver of our deficit, but politicians won’t come near to touching that. 

This current economic expansion that began in 2009 will come crashing down by 2020 as the Fed raises interest rates, according to forecasters surveyed by The Wall Street Journal. Fifty-nine percent of private-sector economists surveyed said the expansion would likely end in 2020, while 22 percent said 2021. Even less declared the recession would arrive next year or in 2022 or later.

“The current economic expansion is getting long in the tooth by historical standards, and more late-cycle signs are emerging,” Scott Anderson said. He is the chief economist at Bank of the West and predicted a 2020 recession.

Sixty-two percent selected an overheating economy leading to Fed tightening and then to a recession. Other options at least 5 percent of economists picked were a financial crisis, the bursting of an asset bubble, a fiscal crisis or disruptions to international trade.

The American Dream is Dead,” reads Georges Abi-Heila’s article on Medium.com that was reposted on ZeroHedge. He lays out the economic situation quite well, focusing on the numbers that paint a very disheartening picture of how impossible it is to move up in America’s unequal society today.

The most important driver of one’s standard of living is sadly determined at birth. Who your parents are will determine your stature in life. Poor people remain poor and rich people stay rich. Fifteen percent of America’s children still live in poverty today. America’s economy is unfair, and it is only getting worse. Sure, life is unfair, but it didn’t always use to be this way.

Economic inequality is spiking at astronomical rates. Most of the country’s economic growth over the last few decades has gone to the top 0.1 percent. Inequality is approaching a level we have not seen since right before the 1929-1939 Great Depression.

The top ten percent of American households own 80 percent of the wealth. In addition, a third of the population has no wealth at all and the top 0.1 percent owns as many assets as the bottom 90 percent. Abi-Heila rephrases the statistics this way: “if the US was a village of 1000 people, there’s 1 guy that has more money than 900 other villagers combined.” The U.S. is by far the most unequal society in the developed world and it is getting worse year after year.

Chances are slim that you can improve your financial situation given the current climate.

“The probability of ending where you start has gone up, and the probability of moving up has gone down,” declared Raj Chetty, an economist at the National Bureau of Economic Research

According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, U.S. social mobility fell 70+ percent over the last 50 years. Making more money than your parents did is far from a sure thing. In fact, in 2016, approximately half of 30-year-olds earned less than their parents at the same age.

The rich get rich while the rest struggle to get by. Since 1979, essentially all of the income gains have gone to the top 1 percent while wages have stagnated for everyone else. Something seemed to change in the 1970s. As wages generally tacked with rising productivity, the average worker’s pay started to not grow as the economy did. Our economy is broken and American workers are getting screwed.

From 1980 to 2014, American households making at or below the median income saw their incomes rise by 1 percent or less. At the very lowest rung of society, pre-tax incomes have actually fallen while government assistance spikes to keep up with Americans making less money. Meanwhile, the rich saw dramatic income growth from the 1980s to today. Incomes for highly educated, suburban home-owning, affluent Americans making in the low six-figures are not driving this rise of income growth as their incomes grew at about 1.5 percent per year. The real spike in income has gone to the pockets of the top one percent (those earning an average of $1.3 million+ a year), where average annual income grew from 3-6 percent.

This stark inequality cannot continue. The American Dream cannot die. Or we will die. Our elites continue to make out like bandits while the rest struggle to pay the bills, meet rising rents, and put food on the table. A redistributive economy and an exploding welfare state are far from adequate answers to this troubling economic dilemma.

A majority of Americans are desperate and hopeless as the champions of globalization continue to point to the decline in poverty in America. However, the homeless population rose in this country for the first time since 2010, and 24 percent have chosen to live in California.

People are finally waking up to the death of the American Dream as Millennials have sadly come to accept that most will likely not earn as much or more than their parents did.

“If a tiny minority has all the wealth, if income is stagnating for 9 citizens out of 10, if chances of climbing are minuscule, isn’t rebellion justified?” Abi-Heila asks.

The rebellion started with the election of Donald Trump. Though he has made some positive moves in the realm of deregulation and the tax cuts putting more money into the pockets of hard-working Americans, his decision to increase spending will explode the deficit to unsustainable rates and his slow-walking in the fight against illegal immigration is making it difficult for many poor Americans to land jobs to support their families.

Something has to change if we are to survive as a nation. A rebellion is needed but a socialist utopia growing the government, giving more benefits and handouts to the poor, and the implementation of a national $15 minimum wage will accomplish nothing. We are borrowing our children’s future with inordinate amounts of debt and it will all come crashing down before we know it. A reordering of the economy and an emphasis on wage growth for Middle America must be enacted. Inequality has to be lessened or the people will revolt.

Mark my words.

 

Follow me @BobShanahanMan

 

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2 Comments

  1. Greg follows Jesus May 23, 2018

    Workforce must be retrained for the millions of Jobs returning to USA WORKFORCE. Obama’s 8 year pove… https://t.co/XUY1nlxsx5

    Reply
  2. MAAT May 23, 2018

    Honestly, that’s the same trend all over the world, people confuse macroeconomics with microeconomic… https://t.co/fFJVkhNnb0

    Reply

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