Can we say job creators?
Originally Posted by LovingKayla
Why the hell aren't they creating then! Below is a good article for people who do not understrand how to much wealth at one end of the curve i not good for a country such as ours.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion...xes/53810288/1
Gap began with Reagan
The shift began when the Reagan administration started a systematic transfer of wealth from the poor and middle class to the privileged few at the top. Subsequent government policy has done little to change that trend. That's dangerous because extremely unequal distribution of wealth makes a society unstable. Nobody knows this better than the
Central Intelligence Agency, which
posts estimates of income inequality for 140 nations in its
World Factbook. The USA has been slowly moving up in the rankings. We're in the top 30% in inequality.
Too much wealth and power in the hands of too few people can interfere with free markets. The dependence of presidential campaigns on a handful of billionaires can interfere with free elections. The greatest flattening of income distribution came in the
World War II years and afterward. The income tax was steeply progressive, trade unions were strong, and corporations were sensitive about exorbitant gaps between their top executives and their workers.
Each of those conditions could be restored. We could return to more progressive taxation, encourage collective bargaining, and place limits on the ratio between worker and executive pay. That last one is important because up until the 1970s, the highest incomes were heavily based on investments, according to Saez. Then came "an explosion of top wages and salaries" so that instead of people living on past wealth, those at the top became the "working rich." Many of them are corporate CEOs with friendly boards and pliable compensation committees.
Some think the problem is one of relative deprivation, that folks in the middle are doing OK. It's just a matter of envy. Not so. The most recent annual report of the
Census Bureau shows that those in the middle are worse off in absolute terms. Median annual household income, adjusted for inflation, fell in most years of the past decade. In 2010, it was
7% below its 1999 peak.
The stability of any democracy depends on its legitimacy, a general sense that the system is fair. And that is what is at risk today.