The U.S. continues to lead the world in billionaires (571 in
2014, with China a distant second at 190). But after decades of financial
deregulation and attacks on employee rights, Americans rank 26th in median
wealth (defined as assets owned, minus debts owed for the person on the middle
rung of the wealth ladder). The median Australian is four times wealthier. The
Canadians are twice as wealthy.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) ranks 43 nations by the degree of employee protection provided by
government. The 21 indicators used include such items as laws and regulations
governing unfair dismissals, notifications and protections during mass layoffs,
the use and abuse of temporary workers, and the provision of severance based on
seniority. Countries are ranked on a scale of 0 to 6 with 6 going to those who
provide the most legal protections for employees and zero for those with the
least. The results showed the United States second-last at 42.
American has nearly the lowest union density rate (the
number of union members, both public and private divided by the total number in
the workforce). Mass strikes virtually disappeared, making it extremely hard
for workers to collectively press for higher wages and set higher wage patterns
for non-union workers as well.
Pro-business policy makers, pundits and academics came up
with the "Better Business Climate" model. They said we could get out
of the 1970s period of high unemployment and inflation (stagflation) if we
unleashed business by cutting taxes and regulations. In particular, the theory
held that businesses need maximum "labor flexibility" —that there
should be virtually no legal restrictions on employer-employee relations. The
more flexibility, the more economic efficiency, and therefore the more economic
growth. The pie would grow bigger and there would be more for everyone. What happened instead? Virtually all the
"growth" went to the top fraction of one percent. The bottom 90
percent stagnated. Finance was deregulated. Wall Street and CEO compensation
skyrocketed.
Many argued that it was all about equal opportunity so that
everyone has a fighting chance to move up the income ladder, a land of
opportunity, not aristocracy. In the U.S., the odds are about 50/50 that you'll
be stuck in the same class as your parents. But in Denmark the odds are greater
than 4 to 1 that you'll improve your economic position.
The free-marketeers of the Tea Party blame immigrants, not
CEOs and of the Libertarian Right blame the government. They both vilify ordinary
folk as the "takers," while allowing the "makers" to rob us
blind. The People are on our own. We'll need to build a new movement that
challenges elite power.
Before globalization, in Homestead, Pennsylvania remember
the way Carnegie and Frick pacified their America iron workers by locking them
out and bringing in Pinkerton thugs? Today large corporations continue to
engage in activities calculated to pacify their workers to maximize profits.
They just use different tactics. Our elected non-representatives, excel in
dividing us, the victims, the 99%, who then blame one another for our common
plight instead of focusing on the actions of the 1% who control the economy.
The 1% is afraid of “We the people”. Homeland Security, NSA spying and
providing military weapons to the police are three signs of this fear. The 1%
fear that the 99% might learn from the rebellion in Ferguson.
Remember the savings and loan scandals of the 1980s and 90s?
1,043 savings and loan associations in the United States failed due to white
collar crime. Thousands of innocent customers suffered great financial harm.
Remember the Enron scandal? Enron customers were cheated
through fraudulent overcharging. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of Enron employees
lost their jobs, pensions, savings, health insurance and more by reason of its
CEO’s criminal conduct. Innocent investors also lost millions of dollars.
Remember downsizing? Greedy corporations moved their
production facilities to so-called third world nations to take advantage of
wage slave labor, child labor, lack of employee safety laws and environmental
regulations, all to garner excess profits. Think of current Detroit as an
example of the economic horrors visited upon American workers and their communities
by these greedy laissez faire capitalists without consciences.
Remember the 2008 financial crises? The days of toxic
mortgages, mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations and
credit default swaps? The entire world suffered and still suffers from the
crimes of banksters and financial elites. People lost their homes, pensions,
jobs, cars, health insurance and more. Their children had to drop out of
college. Spousal and child abuse and suicides abounded. The corporate crooks
who orchestrated the crash got bailed out with trillions of public dollars and
took huge bonuses.
Remember, today the top 1 percent of Americans control 43
percent of the financial wealth while the bottom 80 percent control only 7
percent of the wealth. How much of that
80% is the result of the horrors documented above? This inequality is also the
direct result of federal laws that were passed in return for campaign donations
– legal bribery.
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