The first week of July produced a
somewhat positive Employment Situation report. While the unemployment
rate ticked up just a bit, about 224,000 new jobs were created,
nearly three times as many as were created in the tepid previous
month. There was, of course, the Administration crowing about the
strength of the economy, and with wage growth on the rise, an
impassioned outsider might agree that the US economy is doing well.
But
too many aren't doing as well as they might, and too many, even with
wage growth, aren't making enough money to lie on. Rev. William
Barber's Poor People's Campaign says that more than 140 million
people are living in poverty or near-poverty, nearly 100 million more
than the Census suggests. Indeed, the very existence of a Poor
People's Campaign, 51 years after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
launched his initial assault on poverty, speaks volumes about the
status of our economy.
Poor
people have been the volleyball in a partisan net game, with some
simply ignoring the realities of poverty, and others vilifying the
poor for their poverty. These are the folks who will tell you that
the economy has never been better, ignoring the fact that at least 40
percent (and perhaps as many as 60 percent) have not benefitted from
economic expansion. The average family has yet to recover from the
Great Recession. Many have financed their survival with credit cards,
and between student loans and consumer credit, our nation's
households are $13.7 trillion in debt. According to the Federal
Reserve Bank, 40 percent of our nation's families can't manage a $400
emergency.
Half
of all jobs in this country pay $18.58 per hour or less. How stable
is an economy that pays people so little? Fully a third of all jobs
pay less than the $15 an hour, many legislators want to pay all
workers. The minimum wage, at $7.25, has not increased in a decade,
even as the economy expanded, productivity has risen, stock market
indices are at an all-time high, and we have a President who crows
about economic expansion without paying attention to those on the
bottom.
Macroeconomic
indicators suggest the economy is healthy, but for how long? How
long, can we expect our decades-long economic expansion, to continue?
A minor blip, an extended trade war or, heaven forbid another kind of
war could have devastating effects. This is why our 45th President
keeps picking fights with the Federal Reserve Bank, urging them to
cut already low interest rates to fuel economic expansion. Our nation
can't thrive when nearly half of its citizens are on the outside
looking in. And poverty can be a drag on economic expansion.
The
people who are doing well in our economy have a stake in it. They own
their homes. They own stocks and bonds. They have retirement accounts
and investment accounts. They've seen their asset base soar as the
economy has expanded. But the Great Recession caused African American
people collectively to lose a third of our wealth. Black home
ownership rates grew for thirty years after the passage of the Fair
Housing Act. Those gains were wiped out mostly during the Great
Recession, and today Black home ownership is as low – 41.2
percent – as it was in 1968 when discrimination was legal. In
contrast, the overall homeownership rate in 2016 was 63 percent
overall and 72 percent for whites.
If
this is a stakeholder economy, African Americans have fewer stakes,
but we don't occupy the economic periphery alone. Latinos and whites
also experience poverty, but not at the disproportionate rate that
African Americans do. Racism makes it possible for excessive poverty
to exist! As long as some see poverty as a personal, not structural
failure, it is easy (and acceptable) to demonize the poor, and even
to criminalize them for their poverty. Thanks to folks like Rev.
William Barber, some Americans are awakening to the fact that one
person's poverty is another person's profit center, that the prison
industrial complex needs to be dismantled, and that a restructured,
less militarized (and dare I say green) economy might offer more
opportunity for all!
The
folks who earn $18.58 an hour or less aren't benefiting from the
expanding economy, but some of them support a wealthy huckster who
lies with the same ease that he rises in the morning! He spins
economic confusion in jingoistic and confusing terms so that an
unemployed manufacturing worker in Ohio will passionately argue that
he'd be working if it weren't for illegal immigrants!
Will
we buy into the fallacy and let increasing poverty imperil long-term
economic expansion? Or will we develop a more inclusive and
expansionary economic model? The Presidential campaign offers the
opportunity for a dynamic exchange of ideas. What's next?
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