Robert Reich:
The most troubling economic trend facing America this
Labor Day weekend is the increasing concentration of income, wealth, and
political power at the very top – among a handful of extraordinarily
wealthy people – and the steady decline of the great American middle
class.
Inequality in America is at record levels. The 400 richest
Americans now have more wealth than the bottom 150 million of us put
together.
Republicans claim the rich are job creators. Nothing could
be further from the truth. In order to create jobs, businesses need
customers. But the rich spend only a small fraction of what they earn.
They park most of it wherever around the world they can get the highest
return.
The real job creators are the vast middle class, whose spending drives the economy and creates jobs.
But as the middle class’s share of total income continues
to drop, it cannot spend as much as before. Nor can most Americans
borrow as they did before the crash of 2008 — borrowing that temporarily
masked their declining purchasing power.
As a result, businesses are reluctant to hire. This is the main reason why the recovery has been so anemic.
Read on for how the rich use their super-wealth to prevent Democracy from restoring the middle class.
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