Children, it has long been recognized, are a special group.
They do not choose their parents, let alone the broader conditions into which
they are born. They do not have the same abilities as adults to protect or care
for themselves. That is why the League of Nations approved the Geneva
Declaration on the Rights of the Child in 1924, and why the international
community adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989. The United
States of has not even ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Though an average American childhood may not be the worst in
the world, the disparity between the country's wealth and the condition of its
children is unparalleled. About 14.5 per cent of the American population as a
whole is poor, but 19.9 per cent of children — some 15 million individuals —
live in poverty. For some groups, the situation is much worse: more than 38 per
cent of black children, and 30 per cent of Hispanic children, are poor.
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Among developed countries, only Romania has a higher rate of
child poverty. The US rate is two-thirds higher than that in the United
Kingdom, and up to four times the rate in the Nordic countries. The growing
concentration of wealth — and a significant reduction in taxes on it — has
meant less money to spend on investments for the public good, like education
and the protection of children, (and some in the US Congress want to cut food
stamps — on which some 23 million American households depend, threatening the
poorest children with hunger.) As a result, America's children have become
worse off.
When American schoolchildren open history books and read
about the Civil Rights Movement and Martin Luther King, they are taught of a
time when the US was divided between black and white, where “coloureds” had to
sit on separate seats in buses, drink from special water fountains and were
banned from attending schools with white folks. And they are taught of a civil
rights march on to the National Mall in Washington, where King spoke of having
a dream where black and white would stand together as equals.
According to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from the
Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, the wealth of white households
was eight times that of black households in 2010, but 13 times more in 2013.
The median wealth of white households was nine times that of Hispanic
households in 2010, but 10 times more in 2013.The data suggests that while the
overall net worth of American families remained steady during the economic
recovery, the results between white, black and Hispanic households have not
been equal.
The size of the gap between white and black household wealth
is at its highest point since 1989. At the time, white households made 17 times
the wealth of their black counterparts, while the gap between white and Hispanic
households -- 14 times more for whites -- is at a level not seen since 2001. Between
2010 and 2013, the median wealth of non-Hispanic black households went down
over 33 percent, from $16,600 in 2010 to $11,000 in 2013, and in the same time
frame the median wealth of Hispanic households went from $16,000 to $13,700, or
a drop of over 14 percent.
Meanwhile, the median wealth of non-Hispanic white
households in that period increased over 2 percent, from $138,600 to $141,900. Pew
notes there are several factors responsible for the gap. Financial assets such
as stocks -- which are more likely to be owned by white households -- have had
a healthier and faster recovery of value over housing. As well, minority
households showed a higher decrease of assets such as home ownership, thus
putting white households in a better position for financial recovery.
Income inequality is correlated with inequalities in health,
access to education, and exposure to environmental hazards, all of which burden
children more than other segments of the population. Indeed, nearly one in five
poor American children are diagnosed with asthma, a rate 60 per cent higher
than non-poor children. Learning disabilities occur almost twice as frequently
among children in households earning less than $35,000 a year than they do in
households earning more than $100,000. Inevitably, in countries where children
have inadequate nutrition, insufficient access to health care and education,
and higher exposure to environmental hazards, the children of the poor will
have far different life prospects from those of the rich.
At America's most elite universities, for example, only
around nine per cent of students come from the bottom half of the population,
while 74 per cent come from the top quarter. In America, more is spent on the
education of rich students than on the education of the poor. American states
like California spend about as much on prisons as on higher education — and
sometimes more.
Since the late 1970s, wages for the bottom 90 percent of
American workers have lagged far behind economy-wide productivity growth (a
commonly accepted benchmark for wage growth). The bottom 70 percent of wages
have actually been essentially stagnant. Strikingly, this lack of wage growth
explains essentially the entire rise in income inequality over the past
generation of American life highlighted by Thomas Piketty. This dismal wage
growth is not just a sad but inevitable outcome of an efficient economy.
Instead, it’s the result of a bundle of intentional policy decisions that were
made precisely to shift economic power away from low- and middle-wage workers
and towards corporate owners and managers. Wages for 70 percent of 4-year college
graduates have been flat since 2000, and even most STEM occupations (science,
technology, engineering and math) have seen anemic wage growth over the past
decade.
Frozen wages at the middle and lower ends of the pay scale
are nothing new, of course. They are the key reason for the growing inequality
that has beset the United States and some other Western economies since the
late 1970s. Textbook economics suggests that wages should closely match
productivity. Indeed, in the postwar period (1947-1973) both rose together by
an average of 2 to 3 percent per year. Then, starting about 1979, while U.S.
productivity surged ahead, wages at the middle and lower levels flattened or,
at the low end, declined in relative terms. Labor productivity rose by 93
percent between 1979 and 2012, while wages and benefits crept up by just 38
percent — with nearly all of the gains going to rising health insurance costs
rather than to improved living standards. All told, wages declined about 1
percent per year relative to productivity during those 33 years, while
compensation for those in the top 1 percent rose an astonishing 153 percent.
From 2009 to 2012 (that’s the most recent data), some 95
percent of new income has gone to the top 1 percent; the Walton family (owners
of Walmart) have as much wealth as the bottom 42 percent of the country’s
people combined; and “income mobility” now describes how the rich get richer
while the poor ... actually get poorer.
The credibility of those who argue that employers “can’t afford” to
raise pay — McDonald’s paid its C.E.O. $9.5 million last year — is nil.
Workers’ rights of association and collective bargaining has
been severely restricted. Rules regarding who is eligible for overtime pay have
been allowed to atrophy—including a salary threshold test that has not even
been updated for inflation for decades at a time. Restoring these overtime
protections would provide extra time or money to millions of workers. Extending
basic labor standards and protections to undocumented immigrant workers would
boost their own bargaining power, as well as erode employers’ ability to
leverage the low wages of the undocumented to extract wage concessions from
other workers. While Piketty called for an ambitious global wealth tax, we
don’t need wait for the day when that’s possible to make real progress in
fighting inequality. Opportunities to boost low- and middle-wage workers’
economic power, and hence their wages, are all around us, all the time. Taken in isolation, they’re small, but enact
enough of them together and they’d make a real difference.
It's pretty much beyond dispute that capitalist society will
have disparity between the richest and the poorest. It's also beyond dispute
that we are approaching a social consensus that wealth and income inequality today
now threatens to seriously damage the social fabric. The working poor may look
like the more advantaged -- they have jobs, houses, cars, etc. But the truth is
that they live on the margins of financial disaster. Because they look like the
advantaged, the latter assume that the working poor are just like them in all
relevant respects -- except for hard work. Superficial similarity allows the
rich and powerful to assume their success is simply a result of working harder
because in their minds it's clear that the poor could be just like them;
they're just lazier or failed to develop the same skills. Because the
disadvantaged look like us, despite very real differences, we conclude that
their disadvantage is their own fault. We believe that the disadvantaged would
succeed, just like us, if only they would work harder. We conclude, in effect,
that they have freely chosen not to succeed. The reality is different. The
working poor are not like the advantaged wealthy, superficial similarities aside.
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