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WSWS : News
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America : US
Economy
The worsening state of working America
By Nick Beams
21 January 1999
In a speech to the Detroit Economic Club earlier this month
US president Bill Clinton greeted news of a fall in unemployment
by declaring that the economy was now a "rising tide that
is lifting all boats." The phrase was a throwback to the
claims made by Kennedy in the early 1960s, at the height of the
post-war boom, when it did indeed appear that economic growth
and increased business profits went hand in hand with improved
living standards for working class and middle class families.
The decade of the 1980s, culminating in the recession at the
start of the present decade, saw a different economic process
unfold: increased corporate profits were accompanied by falling
real wages and rising social inequality. But following the end
of the recession in 1992, the defenders of the profit system maintained
that with the steady decline in unemployment and the development
of a "new economy", based on information technology
and computerization, living standards would start to rise again.
A new report published this month gives the lie to this scenario.
The State of Working America 1998-99, the latest
in a biennial series of publications by the Economic Policy Institute,
shows that not only have the tendencies which emerged in the 1980s
continued but new social malignancies have developed as well.
The study found that despite a 2.6 percent increase in real
wages since 1996, median wages were still below their level in
1989 and a typical family had to work more just to maintain its
standards of living.
According to a press release from the EPI: "Putting recent
economic gains in historical context, the study finds that the
living standards of most working families still have not recovered
from the recession of the early 1990s, nor have their wages kept
pace with the growth in productivity. The income growth that has
been generated among middle-income families has been driven largely
by an increase of working hours--an additional six weeks annually
since 1989--to make up for the long-term deterioration of wages.
The economic realities facing the typical American family over
the 1990s include, increased hours of work, stagnant or falling
income, and less secure jobs offering fewer benefits.
"New groups of workers have experienced wage declines
in the 1990s, including recent college graduates and many information-technology
and other white-collar workers. Women workers in the middle and
upper-middle part of the wage distribution, whose real wages rose
significantly in the 1980s, have experienced a sharp deceleration
in the 1990s."
These conclusions are reflected in a series of statistics.
The inflation-adjusted earnings of the median worker in 1997 were
3.1 percent lower than in 1989. Over the 1989-97 period real wages
fell faster for the median worker (-0.4 percent per year) than
they did in the 1979-89 period (-0.2 percent per year). The wage
of the median male worker was 6.7 percent lower in 1997 than in
1989 while median wages for women grew by only 0.8 percent in
the 1990s compared to a growth of 5.7 percent in the previous
decade.
One of the most significant findings concerned entry-level
wages. Between 1989 and 1997, real hourly wages for these positions
declined by 7.4 percent for men and by 6.1 percent for women.
Contrary to the view that declining wages are the result of insufficient
qualifications, male college graduates with one to five years
experience saw their wages decline by 6.5 percent with a 7.4 percent
decline for women.
Over the same period, the gap between wages of the average
worker and those of the chief executive widened further. In 1965
the typical CEO made 20 times more than the average production
worker; by 1989 that ratio had risen to 56, climbing to 116 by
1997.
One of the factors in the slow wage growth has been the increase
in corporate profits in the 1990s. Had profitability grown at
historically normal levels during the 1990s, then hourly compensation
(wages plus benefits) could have been some 7 percent higher in
1997 than it actually was.
The study found that overall family income was characterized
by slower growth and greater inequality, with the median family
income $1,000 (2.3 percent) less in 1996 than in 1989, the last
peak in the business cycle before the recession of the early 1990s.
In no previous business cycle, the study noted, had the recovery
phase proceeded for so long without typical family income exceeding
the point it had reached in the previous peak.
"Young families," it reported, "have been especially
hard hit by overall slow family income growth and widening inequality."
An intergenerational study shows that recent groups of young families
started out with lower incomes and made smaller income gains as
they approached middle age.
Despite the stock market boom, the typical middle-class family
had nearly 3 percent less wealth in 1997 than in 1989, with the
richest 10 percent of households reaping almost 86 percent of
the growth in stock market values since 1989. Overall wealth is
even more concentrated at the top than income, with inequality
worsening in the 1990s. According to projections carried out by
the study, the share of wealth for the top 1 percent of the population
increased from 37.4 percent in 1989 to 39.1 percent in 1997. At
the same time, however, the share of wealth held by the middle
fifth of the population dropped from 4.8 percent to 4.4 percent.
In fact, after adjusting for inflation, this stratum of middle
America saw its wealth fall by 3 percent, primarily because of
increased indebtedness.
At the bottom end of the scale the proportion of households
with zero or negative wealth (families that owed more than they
owned) increased from 15.5 percent to 18.5 percent. Poverty rates
also increased during the 1990s. The poverty rate of 13.7 percent
for 1996 was up from the 12.8 percent rate in 1989. More than
one in five children (20.5 percent) were poor in 1996, up from
19.6 percent in 1989 and 16.4 percent in 1979. Child poverty rates
for black and Hispanic children were 39.9 percent and 40.3 percent
respectively.
On the employment front, the study found that while the jobless
rate has fallen to around 4.5 percent, structural changes within
the economy have increased job insecurity and lowered the proportion
of long-term jobs. The proportion of workers in long-term jobs
(those lasting at least 10 years) declined from 41 percent in
1979 to 35.4 percent in 1996. Most of the deterioration took place
since the end of the 1980s. Fired workers have difficulty in obtaining
new jobs with one third of those interviewed still out of work
one to three years after their dismissal. Those who did obtain
new employment received 13 percent lower wages on average, while
a quarter no longer received employer-provided health insurance.
Work is increasingly of a contingent nature-- almost 30 percent
of workers were employed in what could not be described as regular
full-time jobs. This process is reflected in another statistic:
the proportion of workers employed through temporary help agencies
increased from 1.3 percent in 1989 to 2.4 percent in 1997.
In some ways the most telling statistics were those which refuted
the claims that a "new economy" was being created providing
access to higher-paying jobs to those with college education and
information technology skills. The study found that wage trends
for both white collar and college-educated workers were not favorable
in the 1990s.
"This is especially true," it noted, "for men
over the 1989-97 period: wages for nearly every white-collar occupation
group were stagnant or fell; health insurance cover did not expand;
wages among the college educated rose just 1.2 percent; and the
college/high school wage premium has been flat over the 1992-97
recovery. Remarkably, the entry-level wages earned by new college
graduates, male or female, were 7 percent less in 1997 than in
1989. Even so-called information technology workers have not done
all that well. For example, newly hired engineers and scientists
are earning 11 percent and 8 percent less in 1997 than their counterparts
did in 1989, despite good wage growth over the 1996-97 period."
As the authors point out in their introduction to the report:
"These trends do not fit easily with a story in which information
technology is transforming the workplace, allowing those equipped
to participate to enjoy prosperity while those lacking skills
lag behind. Rather, it seems that white-collar workers' experiences
in the 1990s--wage losses, displacement and job instability--mirror
the unpleasant experiences of blue-collar workers in the 1980s.
"This phenomenon might be described as the 'blue collarization'
of white-collar worklife in the 1990s. How can a new information-age
economy be expected to lift all our wages when it cannot even
do so for white-collar workers and young college graduates working
in technical occupations, presumably the best-educated, most computer
literate, and most flexible segment of the workforce?"
See Also:
The downsizing
of America
GM plant closing in Saginaw, Michigan
[23 December 1998]
US job cuts
to hit 625,000 by year's end
[11 December 1998]
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