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Blog Home : May 2009 : 2009-05-18 to 2009-05-24
Michael Bersin, Show Me Progress
Uh, no. This has been another
edition of simple answers to simple questions. From the
Congressional Budget Office:
Data
on the Distribution of Federal Taxes and Household Income April 2009 It's
good to be the king.
A barely rising tide rockets yachts into the stratosphere. That dark
blue bottom line? That's most of us - if you're that light blue top
line you don't read our stuff here.
...This is a kissing cousin to the question everyone is
raising
these days about financial innovation. It goes like this: the
basic
benefit of all the financial innovation we've seen over the past few
decades has been to make credit more easily available, and that clearly
had something to do with the credit boom and subsequent bust.
This in
turn begs the obvious question: was it really a good idea to make
credit so easily available? If the answer is no - if the only
result
was to mask stagnant wages and produce a fake consumption boom - then
maybe all that innovation wasn't such a hot idea in the first place.
This is rapidly becoming conventional wisdom, and Matt's
point
deserves more attention as part of it. For good or ill, the
modern
economy is driven by middle-class consumption. If middle
class wages
are rising, everything is fine. They'll consume more, debt
will stay
tolerable, and rich people will benefit from the growing economy.
But
if middle class wages are stagnant, then vast pools of money are
increasingly directed toward the rich, who have a limited ability to
spend it. So they end up loaning it back to the middle class,
collecting economic rents along the way, and the middle class laps it
up, figuring that their wage stagnation is just temporary and they'll
eventually pay all the money back... Too bad that years of underfunding and budget cuts have
devastated public education and the peasants can't read graphs...
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