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Numbers Tricks
Mask Declining Wages and Rising Inequality
By Glen Ford
Black Agenda Radio
Wednesday 17
October 2007
U.S. employment
numbers have been doctored into meaninglessness, as have all indices of
economic growth or decline. Not only is the public incapable of making sense
of the nation's cooked books, but Americans have no idea what "class" they
belong to. Almost everyone that is not on public assistance insists they are
"middle class" - but where is the true middle? It's actually a lot further
down the income ladder than most folks think, perilously close to what is
defined as poverty. The rich long ago discovered that keeping everybody else
deluded and disoriented about the real structures of wealth and income
allows them to do whatever they choose. If nearly everybody's in the
"middle," then nobody is anywhere.
New
federal data show that income inequality in the United States is higher
than it's been since World War Two, possibly higher than just before the
stock market crash and Great Depression of 1929. Americans like to complain
about the economy, but they don't like to hear or read economic news - and
that's understandable. The United States and its media are ruled by huge
corporations, that have for many generations deformed American English to
make the language incapable of making any sense of economics. That way,
subjects like vast economic inequalities cannot not be intelligently
discussed among the general public - and the rich can keep on getting richer
without the rest of us knowing how, or why.
The greatest
damage the rich have done to American economic discourse and to the English
vocabulary is their purposeful misuse of the term "middle class." All the
politicians and corporate pundits and commentators and so-called journalists
throw the term around, constantly, but never give it any specific value or
definition.
"Middle class" has
become anything you want it to be. Republicans tend to describe people with
incomes as high as $200,000 per household as middle class - when, in fact,
folks making that much money are in the upper two percent of the population,
nowhere near the middle. Corporate propagandists have other tricks to make
it appear that Americans are better off than they really are. They prefer to
use "average" income data, which throws the very rich - like Bill Gates,
who's worth more than the Gross National Products of at least 70 countries -
into the same mix as ... you. Because the rich are so dramatically better
off than most people, their incomes pull the average way up, making the
figure meaningless.
"The real middle
class makes about $15 dollars an hour, and dropping."
Economists and
phony journalists in service of the wealthy also prefer to cite "household"
income, rather than individual wages, as measurements of economic standing.
The more people in the household above the age of 14 that hold jobs, the
better things look. The fact that real wages went down two percent between
the years 2000 and 2005, might not show up so dramatically, if two or more
family members are out there hustling, taking on different jobs at different
wages over time. The truth becomes obscured, which is exactly how the rich
folks like it. And almost everybody except those who are on public
assistance goes around calling themselves "middle class," with not a clue as
to where the "middle" is.
The real "middle"
among American wage earners, after deductions for child support and, if
you're lucky, payments into a 401(k), is $30,881 a year. That's the median
wage - not the misleading average wage - meaning, half of employees make
more than $30,881, and half make less. Not very impressive, is it? A family
of four with one wage earner making $20,000 is officially in poverty in the
United States, which is not very far away from the median wage of a little
over $30,000. And we haven't even talked about health care costs and the
ever-rising price of housing.
At the same time,
the number of millionaires is at a record high, nearing eight million, while
the median American worker - the real middle class - makes about $15 dollars
an hour, and dropping. No wonder the rich take such pains to scrub the
language clean of a vocabulary that could explain how they are stealing the
wealth of the nation and the world.
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