The Plutonomy Is Still Going Strong - This is an economy by and for the rich.
https://prospect.org/economy/2025-09-18-plutonomy-still-going-strong/

We are closing in on the 20th anniversary of one of the most revealing pieces of bank analyst research in recent American history. On October 16, 2005, Citigroup released an
industry note for investors that started with a bracing statement: The World is dividing into two blocsthe Plutonomy and the rest.
Plutonomy is defined as an economy where, well, plutocrats provide the lions share of the economic activity and have a distortionary effect on economic statistics. One way to describe it is that if Bill Gates walked into a room with three laborers, the average wealth of all four in the room would be in the billions. But that wouldnt tell you anything about the circumstances of the nonBill Gates members of the sample, or how the economy feels to the average person in the room. Consensus analyses that do not tease out the profound impact of the plutonomy on spending power, debt loads, savings rates (and hence current account deficits), oil price impacts
are flawed from the start, the note explains.
This was an investor note, and it was primarily focused on finding a plutonomy basket of stocks to capitalize on this tendency. (Luxury goods, essentially.) But the researchers at Citigroup provided strong evidence for a continued pulling away of the rich from the rest, which has a lot of explanatory power for the moment were in economically today. How, otherwise, to explain the current combination of increased inflation, increased unemployment, and yet also increased consumer spending? It all makes sense if you remove the averages and tease out who is doing all the buying and who is experiencing all the suffering. Since the pandemic, many have used the term
K-shaped economy to demonstrate that the richer segments of society have seen their fortunes rise while the poorest fall. But I prefer plutonomy, a closer analogue to the idea of a
Second Gilded Age.

Politicians keep ignoring a key logical outcome of plutonomy: Even though a small subset of Americans have all the money, they dont (yet) get to cast all the votes. This explains a kind of permanent miasma among the public, and the tendency for parties in power to shout ineffectually that everyones doing fine, if you only look at the mythical average consumer. The top 10 percent have been increasing their overall share of consumer spending for the past three decades, from a little over 35 percent in 1994 to
49.2 percent in the most recent quarter, a new record high according to Moodys analyst Mark Zandi. Breaking out income earners by level of consumer spending, as
Zandi did, shows that while the bottom 80 percent of earners spend at levels consistent with the Consumer Price Index, the top 20 percent spend at staggeringly higher levels. The U.S. economy is being largely powered by the well-to-do, he concluded.
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