Paul Krugman: We Are the 99.9%
“We are the 99 percent” is a great slogan. It correctly defines the
issue as being the middle class versus the elite (as opposed to the
middle class versus the poor). And it also gets past the common but
wrong establishment notion that rising inequality is mainly about the
well educated doing better than the less educated; the big winners in
this new Gilded Age have been a handful of very wealthy people, not
college graduates in general.
If anything, however, the 99 percent slogan aims too low. A large
fraction of the top 1 percent’s gains have actually gone to an even
smaller group, the top 0.1 percent — the richest one-thousandth of the
population.
And while Democrats, by and large, want that super-elite to make at
least some contribution to long-term deficit reduction, Republicans want
to cut the super-elite’s taxes even as they slash Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid in the name of fiscal discipline.
Before I get to those policy disputes, here are a few numbers.
Friday, November 25, 2011
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