By Michael Lombardi, MBA for Profit Confidential
According
to a study by economists at the University of California, Berkeley, the
Paris School of Economics, and Oxford University, the income gap in the
U.S. economy in 2012 was similar to what it was in 1920s! (Source:
Associated Press, September 10, 2013.)
In 2012, the income of the top one percent of earners increased by
almost 20%; for the bottom 99%, their income only increased by one
percent.
But that’s not all…
The top 10% of all the income earners in the U.S. economy had more
than 48% of all the net earnings in 2012. Going back further, since the
Great Recession’s end in June of 2009, 95% of all increases in net
earnings in the U.S. economy have gone to the top one percent.
Dear reader, this is not economic growth,
it’s just a classic example of the rich getting richer and the poor
getting poorer. When a country experiences real economic growth, you
will see a steady rise in all incomes.
As I stated earlier, in 2012, almost 50% of all the net earnings went
to the top 10%, meaning only 50% went to the bottom 90%. Will this
increase consumer spending in
the U.S. economy? Of course not. The top 10% can only buy so much and
the economy can only go so far on that. For economic growth to happen,
you need the middle class to be spending.
What we are witnessing today is the slowest post-recession recovery
most living economists have ever experienced. If you take out the rally
in stock prices since 2009, there has been no real economic growth.
Auto sales have risen, but auto loans have gone through the roof. (See “Scary Story on the Booming Auto Sales No One Is Talking About.”)
Housing has come back somewhat, but rising interest rates have
resulted in a big decline in mortgage applications (the collapsing
homebuilder stocks are telling us there’s a problem with the housing
recovery).
Retailers from the low end of the market to mid-market are
complaining that sales are not growing—their stock prices, a leading
indicator, are again trending downward. Retailers are not seeing
economic growth in this country.
And the unemployment picture in the U.S. economy remains a problem
for economic growth. Add in people who have given up looking for work
and those who want full-time jobs but are only able to find part-time
work, and the unemployment rate sits at almost 14%—and it’s been there
or higher for years now! How can you have economic growth with the
unemployment level so high?
As I have written before, the U.S. is headed in the same direction as
Europe, where there are only the rich and poor—the middle class no
longer exists. You won’t hear politicians talking about this depressing
trend, but it’s the doomed road that America is on, and it’s not leading
to economic growth.
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