click to enlarge |
The chart above, from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) using the World
Top Incomes Database, shows how income gains between 1975
and 2007 were divvied up in 18 OECD countries for which the researchers had
data. Nowhere did the rich benefit as much as in America.
As you can see, in some countries like Denmark the
vast majority of income gains went to the bottom 90 percent -- SOCIALISTS! --
while nearly half of U.S. income gains went to the richest one percent because of freedom, my friends.
America’s top 1 percent of earners accounted for 47
percent of all pre-tax income growth over that time period. And that’s
excluding capital gains, for God's sake. Throw in the rest of the top 10
percent, and you’re looking at a group that got four-fifths of all income
growth between the Ford and George W. Bush administrations. The rest of us were
left to scramble for the last one-fifth of extra income. If you add in capital
gains, which typically accrue to the highest earners anyway, the picture is
probably a lot worse.
That trend had a big impact on total income share:
Between 1981 and 2012, the top 1 percent more than doubled their share of total
pre-tax income. They now account for about 20 percent of the nation's earnings.
That's more than any other OECD country for which we have data:
click to enlarge |
But for truly shocking numbers, consider America’s
even more-exclusive 0.1-percent club. Those super-duper-rich people -- we’re
talking Warren
Buffett rich -- saw their share of the income
pot jump all the way to 8 percent in 2010 from just 2 percent in 1980. The
super-duper rich swoop up smaller percentages in countries like Canada, the
United Kingdom and Australia.
The super-rich getting super-richer would all be
well and good, except that it doesn’t appear the nation’s “wealth creators” are
creating much wealth for anyone else. According to the OECD’s report, the
pre-tax, inflation-adjusted incomes of the bottom 99 percent have only grown by
an average of 0.6 percent per year in recent decades. Add in the top one
percent, and the country's income growth rate jumps to 1 percent.
This lack of trickle-down prosperity is a key focus
of Capital in the Twenty-first Century,
the new manifesto by French economist Thomas Piketty that destroys the argument
for supply-side economics.
A common argument put forth by defenders of income
inequality -- yes, they exist -- is that a
rather large percentage of Americans move in and out of the 1 percent over the
course of their lives, so the divide between the rich and everyone else is a
bit of a false distinction in their view.
But while the country's economic mobility hasn’t
gotten worse over the past few decades, it has essentially plateaued at
a level lower than that of the Canadians.
And I think we can all agree that if we have to deal with American levels of inequality,
we can at least strive for Canadian levels of mobility.
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