Friday, February 26, 2010

Deflating The Middle Class Dream

The dream of the middle class is that the majority of people will be able to comfortably cover their basic needs by working a reasonable number of hours at a probably unspectacular, but useful and therefore, respectable, job. A middle class life means a secure place to live, good food to eat, adequate medical care, the ability to purchase clothing and transportation services suitable to maintaining employment, and a stable environment for your children to grow up in so they can do as well or better [1].

Today, the entire concept of the middle class is being effectively scrapped in an environment where that level of economic security may often require desperate measures [2], or a six-figure income [3]. Why? Because no new jobs were created between 1999 and 2009 [4], completely deflating the wage economy.

In Avedon Carol's words, "Our owners are telegraphing that some magic formula dictates [5] that we have to be made miserable. Of course, what's making us miserable isn't magic - it's them." Productivity will likely continue to rise [6], but its benefits won't be shared [7] down the economic ladder [8], they'll be used as collateral to cash out productive enterprises [9] and fire their workers.

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