For example, since 1980, aggregate national income grew an avg. of 1.3% annually, but this growth went disproportionately to the wealthiest—
The top 10% saw their incomes rise by 2%,
the top 1% saw theirs rise by 2.9%,
& the bottom 90% saw their incomes rise by just 1%. 7/n
And across recent recessions and expansions, data show the top 10% of earners have taken around 50% of all economic growth. 8/n
This lopsided pattern of growth has serious downstream consequences—
Raj Chetty @HarvardEcon et al have shown, mobility has declined precipitously in the US, and 2/3 of this decline can be attributed to unequal patterns of growth. equitablegrowth.org/the-fading-ame… 9/n
The metrics that policymakers use to evaluate the US economy are reflective of what type of success we, as a nation, value.
If strong, stable & broad-based economic growth is important, then policymakers need to align policies with those values. nytimes.com/2018/09/14/opi… 10/n
Recently, @SenSchumer, @MartinHeinrich & @RepMaloney introduced legislation to measure who actually prospers when the economy grows, an acknowledgement that GDP growth is no longer a sufficient measure for understanding the health of our economy. vox.com/policy-and-pol… 11/n
Distributional measures of growth—what @equitablegrowth calls #GDPv2—will help policymakers design policies aimed at raising output while reducing the huge gap between the very rich and the rest of America. equitablegrowth.org/gdp-2-0-measur… 12/n
As I lay out in my book #UnboundEcononmy, inequality is obstructing, subverting & distorting our economy.
One of the most important things we can do to fight inequality in the United States right now is to start keeping track of it. newyorker.com/news/our-colum… 13/n
But until we change the way we conceptualize, and therefore measure, economic prosperity, we are unlikely to have very much of it.
I talked to @kairyssdal@Marketplace about misplaced concern over #austerity—and why handwringing about deficits now will prolong the economic suffering of millions of Americans.
The risk of doing too little to support families & businesses will far outweigh the risk of doing too much
We need to continue to pump money into the economy if we are going to avoid a coronavirus recession that makes the Great Recession a fond memory heatherboushey.medium.com/beware-of-aust… 2/
The premature pullback in government support during the Great Recession is why it took a full decade to return to pre-crisis unemployment rates.
As the past decade has shown, austerity was not the answer then, and it surely is not now. epi.org/publication/wh… 3/
Our economy is in trouble. Why? The virus has roared back. With COVID-19 cases again overwhelming hospitals, leaders across the country are, for the sake of us all, limiting large gatherings and activities that cause the disease to spread – like indoor dining. 1/8
The fact that the United States has failed to contain the virus means that millions of esp small biz & workers will (again) see their incomes fall & livelihoods potentially destroyed. Congress must put together a robust relief plan to support communities through this crisis. 2/8
New employment data -- some quick reactions ... 1/n
From the BLS Commissioner's Report: "Employment in public- and private-sector education declined in September [relative to August]. In the public sector, employment in education fell by 49,000 in state government and by 231,000 in local government." bls.gov/news.release/j…
Ah ... I should start w/the headline: The economy added 661,000 jobs in September, and the unemployment rate fell to 7.9 percent. We are still down 10.7 million jobs relative to February, before the pandemic hit the USA. 3/n
I kick off my book Unbound with one of the slogans of the labor movement: For the Many, Not The Few. I was able to get the good education that enabled me to write this because my father was a member of @IAM751@MachinistsUnion, who fought like hell for their members. 2/10
In the 2000s, I was honored to serve as president of @NonprofitUnion, where we organized think-tank workers. That local now represents @EGLaborUnion. We recognized the union by card check, so staff would not be subjected to Trump’s anti-worker NLRB. epi.org/blog/the-trump… 3/10
Let’s be clear: We need to provide relief to families and small- and medium-sized businesses hit hard by the closures caused by the pandemic. We must ensure relief goes to communities of color hit so hard by this crisis. The way to do this is to borrow at today's low rates 1/18
Unemployment remains in double-digits. & the official rate a likely under-estimate. “True” unemp rate for July closer to 13.8% than the reported 10.2% b/c of misclassification due to pandemic, while rates remain very high for Black & Latino workers
Yet, the Administration is asleep at the wheel. Enhanced unemployment benefits expired in late July. The amount of benefits workers are receiving have fallen off a cliff:
As the Hutchins Center Fiscal Impact Measure @BrookingsInst shows, the #coronavirus recession has wiped out years of growth, and were it not for government fiscal stimulus, its effects would have been even worse. brookings.edu/interactives/h… 2/
We are perilously close to something akin to the Depression, and austerity would be catastrophic
Policymakers need to continue to pump money into the economy if we are going to avoid a collapse that makes the Great Recession of 2007–2009 a fond memory prospect.org/economy/beware… 3/