Throughout my career in journalism, dating back more than 50 years, I have been painting the U.S. as an oligarchy governed by an aristocracy of wealth. More and more social critics are now providing the same picture, with statistics showing the increasingly worsening inequality that characterizes this nation.
Here, by permission of the authors, is a graphic presentation of the situation by labor law attorney Dmitri Iglitzin and Steven Hill, director of the political reform program of New America Foundation and author of Ten Steps to Repair American Democracy.
When pets are poisoned by imported pet food or U.S. attorneys are fired under suspicious circumstances, Congress gears up hearings and vows quick action. A far greater scandal, however, has hardly gained the interest of legislators or the presidential candidates. That is the increasing wealth gap between the rich, the middle class and the poor, which is reaching alarming proportions.
The top 10% of income earners in the United States now owns 70% of the wealth, and the wealthiest 1% owns more than the bottom 95%, according to the Federal Reserve. In 2005, the top 300,000 Americans enjoyed about the same share of the nation's income — 21.8% — as the bottom 150 million.
New York is an especially bleak case study. The top fifth of earners in Manhattan now makes 52 times what the lowest fifth makes — $365,826 annually compared with $7,047 — roughly comparable to income disparity in Namibia.
Meanwhile, the ratio of average CEO to worker pay in the U.S. shot up from 301-to-1 to 431-to-1 in 2004. The average CEO now earns substantially more in one day than the average worker earns all year. Adding insult to injury, taxpayers actually give tax breaks to corporations for those salaries, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars.
In a country founded on the principle that "all men are created equal," this stark and growing economic inequality has become a third rail of politics. Almost no one in political leadership touches it for fear of being accused of inciting class warfare.
But we've reached a point where the "land of equality" has become a very unequal place. Government has an important role to play in restoring another fine American value: fairness.
A small first step would be passing the Income Equity Act, denying corporations a tax deduction for excessive CEO salaries (defined as pay greater than 25 times the company's lowest full-time worker). They could still pay CEOs whatever they wished, but taxpayers would no longer subsidize it. That would create some downward pressure on executive income while saving taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.
More substantive would be a fix to Social Security's dirty little secret of favoring the rich: Annual wage income above $94,200 is completely untaxed by Social Security. While an average worker pays 6.2% of her income to Social Security, a CEO earning $1 million pays only 1% of his salary. As is, only 83% of all wages are subject to Social Security taxes, so this would increase annual revenues by nearly 20%, or $100 billion a year, keeping Social Security solvent.
Other worthy proposals include increasing the minimum wage, providing child care for working parents, expanding health care and lowering college costs. But the most direct way to address inequality is to reimpose higher income tax rates. Current rates are extremely low, historically-speaking. Under President Dwight Eisenhower's Republican administration, the maximum marginal tax rate was 87%. The Reagan tax cut of 1981 dramatically lowered this to 50%, then again to 28% in 1986. Since then, no surprise, our nation has seen a steady rise in wealth disparity.
It is long past time for our political leaders to put aside the scandal du jour and take urgently needed action to slow if not reverse our nation's growing economic inequality.
Quote this article on your site
To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.
Preview :
The U.S. today - an oligarchy with inequality growing worse
Wednesday, 29 August 2007
Wednesday, 29 August 2007
Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Set as favorite
Bookmark
Email This
Hits: 1347
Comments (3)

a guest
said:
|
... The rich men create the wars, the poor men fight them and this has been happening for centuries. This will always happen unless the poor man wakes up to its dominators. |
|
a guest
said:
|
Taxes So let me get this straight: Among other things, you are sugguesting raising the income tax on everybody and then raising taxes even more on the richer people? Doesn't it seem wrong that you would have to pay a higher percentage of your money than the person next to you because YOU actually went to college for years to get a good job? And how is raising income tax on everybody going to make the poor richer? That seems like it would just bump everybody down and not close the gap at all. |
|
Write comment

Digg
Del.icio.us
Reddit
Slashdot
Furl
Yahoo
Blogmarks
Technorati
Newsvine
Googlize this
Facebook
Wikio