Middle-income Households No Longer The Majority In
The USBy Andre Damon
For the first time in more than four decades,
“middle-income households” no longer constitute the majority of
American society, according to a study published Wednesday by the
Pew Research Center. Instead, the majority of households are either
low or higher-income.
The study concluded, “Once in the clear majority,
adults in middle-income households in 2015 were matched in number by
those in lower- and upper-income households combined.” Pew called
its findings “a demographic shift that could signal a tipping point”
in American society.
The study also found a sharp fall in household
incomes and wealth, particularly for low-income households, noting
that only “upper-income families realized notable gains in wealth
from 1983 to 2013.”
Together with the decline in the relative numbers
of middle-income earners, the incomes of households in this group
has fallen substantially in recent decades. The median income of
middle-income households fell by four percent between 2000 and 2014,
while their median wealth fell by 28 percent over approximately the
same period.
The study notes that since 1983, the total share
of income accruing to high-income households has grown
significantly. The study found that “fully 49% of US aggregate
income went to upper-income households in 2014, up from 29% in
1970.” Meanwhile the share “accruing to middle-income households was
43% in 2014, down substantially from 62% in 1970.”
These findings reflect the persistent declines in
wages for US workers following decades of de-industrialization,
which has been accompanied by significant increases in the yields of
financial assets, helping to increase the wealth and earnings of the
financial elite, along with a section of upper middle-class
households.
While the study’s metrics are too broad to capture
the enormous concentration of society’s wealth in the hands of the
top 1 and 0.1 percent, they reflect the reality that a “middle
class” lifestyle is increasingly out of reach for the broad majority
of the US population.
The Pew study, an analysis of data from the Census
Bureau’s current population survey, defines “middle-income”
households as those earning between two-thirds and twice the US
median household income, or between $42,000 to $126,000 for a
household of three. Those classified as low-income made less than
two-thirds the typical income, while those classified as high-income
made twice the median income.
The study added that the fastest growing sections
of the population were those at the extremes of the income
distribution: the very rich and the very poor. “The movement out of
the middle has not simply been at the margins—the growth has been at
the extreme ends of the income ladder,” with “the fastest-growing
numbers… in the very lowest and very highest income tiers.”
The study found that, after dividing US households
into fifths based on household income, “In 2015, 20% of American
adults were in the lowest income tier, up from 16% in 1971. On the
opposite side, 9% are in the highest income tier, more than double
the 4% share in 1971.” Meanwhile the share of adults in the lower
middle or upper middle income brackets have remained unchanged.
The report added, “The growth at the top is
similarly skewed,” as “the share of adults in highest-income
households [has] more than doubled, from 4% in 1971 to 9% in 2015.
But the increase in the share in upper-middle income households was
modest, rising from 10% to 12%.”
The study further noted the impact of the 2008
crisis on the wealth of middle-income households. It stated, “Before
the onset of the Great Recession, the median wealth of middle-income
families increased from $95,879 in 1983 to $161,050 in 2007, a gain
of 68%. But the economic downturn eliminated that gain almost
entirely. By 2010, the median wealth of middle-income families had
fallen to about $98,000, where it still stood in 2013.”
The wealth of higher income households has largely
been protected from the 2008 financial crash. “Upper income families
more than doubled their wealth from 1983 to 2007 as it climbed from
$323,402 to $729,980. Despite losses during the recession, these
families recovered somewhat since 2010 and had a median wealth of
$650,074 in 2013, about double their wealth in 1983.”
The Pew figures also show the impact of the
persistent economic slump on a broad range of households, noting,
“Americans are less well-to-do now than at the start of the 21st
century. For all income tiers, median incomes in 2014 were lower
than in 2000. These reversals are the result of two recessions—the
downturn in 2001 and the Great Recession of 2007-09—and economic
recoveries that have been too anemic to fully repair the damage.”
The conclusion that the incomes and wealth of all
sections of society have declined since the start of the 2008 crisis
is attributable to the fact that the study’s methodology is too
broad to encompass the most dramatic change in American society: the
enormous concentration of wealth and income in the hands of the
financial oligarchy. The handful of multi-millionaires and
billionaires in this social group are wealthier than ever.
Figures published last year by professors Emmanuel
Saez and Gabriel Zucman showed that the wealthiest 0.5 percent of
American society saw their share of the country’s wealth double,
from about 17 percent in 1978 to just under 35 percent in 2012. The
top 0.1 percent (one one-thousandth of the population) now controls
more than 20 percent of all wealth, up from about 8 percent in the
late 1970s.
The vast growth of social inequality is not the
result of an impartial and merely objective process, but is rather
the result of policies pursued by the government for decades aimed
at slashing the wages and benefits of American workers while
enriching the financial oligarchy that dominates wealth and
political power in the US. This process has been dramatically
accelerated under the Obama administration.
The persistent growth of social inequality is the
most conspicuous and defining characteristic of contemporary
American society. It is this process, facilitated by the
financialization of the economy and the continuous diversion of
resources away from productive investment, that underlies the
erosion of democratic forms of government and the endless promotion
of war and militarism.
This process expresses, moreover, a deep social
crisis to which the financial elite, obsessed with the expansion of
its own wealth and social privilege, can offer no solutions.
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