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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 09:53 AM
Original message
US majority faces another lost decade
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/MJ08Dj01.html

Food pantries picked over. Incomes drying up. Shelters bursting with the homeless. Job seekers spilling out the doors of employment centers. College grads moving back in with their parents. The angry and disillusioned filling the streets.

Pan your camera from one coast of the United States to the other, from city to suburb to farm and back again, and you'll witness scenes like these. They are the legacy of the Great Recession, the Lesser Depression, or whatever you choose to call it.

In recent months, a blizzard of new data, the hardest of hard numbers, has laid bare the dilapidated condition of the American economy, and particularly of the once-mighty American middle class. Each report sparks a flurry of news stories and pundit


chatter, but never much reflection on what it all means now that we have just enough distance to look back on the first decade of the 21st century and see how Americans fared in that turbulent period.

And yet the verdict couldn't be more clear-cut. For the American middle class, long the pride of this country and the envy of the world, the past 10 years were a bust. A washout. A decade from hell.

Paychecks shrank. Household wealth melted away like so many sandcastles swept off by the incoming tide. Poverty spiked, swallowing an ever-greater share of the population, young and old. "This is truly a lost decade," Harvard University economist Lawrence Katz said of these last years. "We think of America as a place where every generation is doing better, but we're looking at a period when the median family is in worse shape than it was in the late 1990s."
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TBF Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 09:56 AM
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1. "the top 1% of earners enjoyed 65% of all income growth" -
Not to mention the banks' swindle from the tax payers and fighting who knows how many wars.

Just reigning in those two aspects (nationalize the banks, bring the military home and put them to work on infrastructure), along with letting the Bush tax rates expire would put us in a much better place.
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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 10:42 AM
Response to Original message
2. i'll give this 1 kick any way. nt
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Kurovski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 02:13 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. And another.
:kick:
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southmost Donating Member (528 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 12:14 PM
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3. what will the PTB do with us as they surely but slowly push us to the streets
it's going to get worse before it gets better
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Mnemosyne Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-07-11 12:33 PM
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4. It's gotten beyond hard, not sure I can make it to Spring anymore. n/t
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