-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

3/23/00

Why do we have an economic system like this particular one?
Why do we have a political system entirely manipulated by the Rich.
Why is greed " good?"
Why are business suits a type of universal dress.
Why is " the bottom line " understood by everyone?
Why is a corporation a person?
and Why does money talk?

Because our society's most important institutions are run by and
for the rich.

Joshua2
=====================================================
URL: http://www.prospect.org/archives/22/22wolf.html

Copyright � 1999 by The American Prospect, Inc. Preferred Citation:
Edward N. Wolff,
"How the Pie is Sliced: America's Growing Concentration of Wealth,"
The American
Prospect no. 22, Summer 1995. This article may not be resold,
reprinted, or
redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written
permission from the
author. Direct questions about permissions to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

How the Pie is Sliced:
America's Growing Concentration of Wealth

Edward N. Wolff

Conservative economic policy has one central idea: just create a
bigger
pie, and everyone will have a bigger slice. In fact, conservatives
predict
that if we cut the rich a bigger piece by lowering their tax rates,
the
resulting growth will enlarge everyone else's slice, too. This was the
core
idea of Reagan's tax cuts, and it is central to such current
conservative
goals as lower capital gains taxes.

Unfortunately, since the 1980s the great majority
of Americans have not been getting bigger slices
from a growing pie. As many people have noted,
median family income has failed to grow. The
picture is even more stark for gains in wealth
than for gains in income. New research, based on
data from federal surveys, shows that between 1983
and 1989 the top 20 percent of wealth holders
received 99 percent of the total gain in
marketable wealth, while the bottom 80 percent of
the population got only 1 percent. America
produced a lot of new wealth in the '80s--indeed,
the stock market boomed--but almost none of it
filtered down.

Few people realize how extraordinarily
concentrated the gains in wealth have been.
Between 1983 and 1989 the top 1 percent of income
recipients received about a third of the total
increase in real income. But the richest 1 percent
received an even bigger slice--62 percent--of the
new wealth that was created (see figure at right).

The most recent data suggest these trends have
continued. My preliminary estimates indicate that
between 1989 and 1992, 68 percent of the increase
in total household wealth went to the richest 1
percent--an even larger share of wealth gain than
between 1983 and 1989. As a result, the
concentration of wealth reached a postwar high in 1992, the latest
year for
which data are available. If these trends continue, the super rich
will pull
ahead of other Americans at an even faster pace in the 1990s than they
did
in the '80s.

Growing inequality in the distribution of wealth has serious
implications
for the kind of society we live in. Today, the average American
family's
wealth adds up to a comparatively meager $52,200, typically tied up in
a
home and some small investments. While Forbes magazine each year keeps
listing record numbers of billionaires--in 1994 Forbes counted 65 of
them in
the U.S.--homeownership has been slipping since the mid-1970s. The
percentage of Americans with private pensions has also been dropping.
And,
with their real incomes squeezed, middle-income families have not been
putting savings aside for retirement. The number of young Americans
going to
college has also begun to decline, another indirect sign of the same
underlying phenomenon. In fact, international data now indicate that
wealth
is more unequally distributed in the U.S. than in other developed
countries,
including that old symbol of class privilege, Great Britain.


Economic worries may be at the root of much of the political anger in
America today, but there is almost no public debate about the growth
in
wealth inequality, much less the steps needed to reverse current
trends. The
debate needs to start with an understanding of how and why America's
pie is
getting sliced so unequally.

REVERSAL OF FORTUNES

The increasing concentration of wealth in the past 15 years represents
a
reversal of the trend that had prevailed from the mid-1960s through
the late
1970s. The share of total wealth owned by the rich depends, to a large
extent, on asset values and therefore swings sharply with the stock
market,
but some trends stand out (see figure 2 above). During the twenty
years
after World War II, the richest 1 percent of Americans (the "super
rich")
generally held about a third of the nation's wealth. After hitting a
postwar
high of 37 percent in 1965, their share dropped to 22 percent as late
as
1979. Since then, the share owned by the super rich has surged--almost
doubling to 42 percent of the nation's wealth in 1992, according to my
estimates.[1]

Two statistics--median and mean family wealth--help to tell the story
of
growing wealth inequality in America. A median is the middle of a
distribution, the point at which there are an equal number of cases
above
and below. Median family wealth represents the holdings of the average
family. Mean family wealth is the average in a different sense: total
wealth
divided by the total number of families. If a few families account for
a
large bulk of the nation's wealth, the mean will exceed the median.
The
changing ratio between the mean and median is one measure of changes
in
wealth inequality.

Data from the 1983, 1989, and 1992 Survey of Consumer Finances
conducted by
the Department of Commerce show that mean wealth has indeed been much
higher
than the median: $220,000 versus $52,000 in 1992. And mean wealth has
grown
more rapidly--by 23 percent from 1983 to 1989, and by another 12
percent in
the following three years, while median wealth increased by only 8
percent
between 1983 and 1989 and then barely moved up at all from 1989 to
1992 (see
the figure "Median and Mean Wealth and Income,"). As a result, between
1983
and 1989 the ratio of mean to median wealth jumped from 3.4 to 3.8.

Data for 1992 are as yet incomplete. However, the figures available
indicate
that the ratio of mean to median wealth saw another steep rise between
1989
and 1992, from 3.8 to 4.2. On the basis of a regression analysis of
the
historical relation between this ratio and the share of wealth held by
the
top 1 percent of families, I estimated their share at 42 percent in
1992.

Income inequality also increased over the same period. From 1983 to
1989,
the share of the top 20 percent increased from 52 to 56 percent, while
that
of the remaining 80 percent decreased from 48.1 to 44.5 percent. The
preliminary evidence from the 1992 Survey of Consumer Finances
suggests a
further rise in income inequality between 1989 and 1992 (the ratio of
mean
to median income increased from 1.57 to 1.61), though this change is
much
more muted than from 1983 to 1989 (when the ratio moved upward from
1.42 to
1.57).

By the 1980s the U.S. had become the most
unequal industrialized country in terms of
wealth. The top 1 percent of wealth holders
controlled 39 percent of total household
wealth in the United States in 1989, compared
to 26 percent in France in 1986, about 25
percent in Canada in 1984, 18 percent in Great
Britain, and 16 percent in Sweden in 1986.
This is a marked turnaround from the early
part of this century when the distribution of
wealth was considerably more unequal in Europe
(a 59 percent share of the top 1 percent in
Britain in 1923 versus a 37 percent share in
the U.S. in 1922).

The concept of wealth used here is marketable
wealth--assets that can be sold on the market. It does not include
consumer
durables such as automobiles, televisions, furniture, and household
appliances; these items are not easily resold, or their resale value
typically does not reflect the value of their consumption to the
household.
Also excluded are pensions and the value of future Social Security
benefits
a family may receive.

Some critics of my work, such as the columnist Robert Samuelson of the
Washington Post, argue that a broader definition of wealth shows less
concentration. To be sure, including consumer durables, pensions, and
entitlements to Social Security reduces the level of measured
inequality.
The value of consumer durables amounted to about 10 percent of
marketable
wealth in 1989; including them in the total reduces the share of the
top 1
percent of wealth holders from 39 percent to 36 percent. Adding
pensions and
Social Security "wealth," which together totaled about two-thirds of
marketable wealth, has a more pronounced effect, reducing the share of
the
top 1 percent from 36 percent to 22 percent. However, even though
pensions
and Social Security are a source of future income to families, they
are not
in their direct control and cannot be marketed. Social Security
"wealth"
depends on the commitment of future generations and Congresses to
maintain
benefit levels; it is not wealth in the ordinary meaning of the term.

Moreover, the inclusion of consumer durables, pensions, and Social
Security
does not affect trends in inequality. With these assets included, the
share
of the richest 1 percent reached its lowest level in 1976, at 13
percent,
and nearly doubled by 1989 to 22 percent. Nor does it affect
international
comparisons. For example, using this broader concept of wealth, we
still
find that the share of the top 1 percent in the U.S. is almost double
that
of Britain in 1989--22 percent versus 12
percent.

WHY THE RICH GOT RICHER

Part of the explanation for growing wealth concentration lies in what
has
happened to the different kinds of assets that the rich and the middle
class
hold. Broadly speaking, wealth comes in four forms:


     homes
     liquid assets, including cash, bank deposits, money market funds,
and
     savings in insurance and pension plans
     investment real estate and unincorporated businesses
     corporate stock, financial securities, and personal trusts.

Middle-class families have more than two-thirds of their wealth
invested in
their own home, which is probably responsible for the common
misperception
that housing is the major form of family wealth in America. Those
families
have another 17 percent in monetary savings of one form or another,
with
only a small amount in businesses, investment real estate, and stocks.
The
ratio of debt to assets is very high, at 59 percent.



In contrast, the super rich invest over 80 percent of their savings in
investment real estate, unincorporated businesses, corporate stock,
and
financial securities. Housing accounts for only 7 percent of their
wealth,
and monetary savings another 11 percent. Their ratio of debt to assets
is
under 5 percent.

Viewed differently, more than 46 percent of all outstanding stock,
over half
of financial securities, trusts, and unincorporated businesses, and 40
percent of investment real estate belong to the super rich. The top 10
percent of families as a group account for about 90 percent of stock
shares,
bonds, trusts, and business equity, and 80 percent of non-home real
estate.
The bottom 90 percent are responsible for 70 percent of the
indebtedness of
American households (See figures).

Thus, for most middle-class families, wealth is closely tied to the
value of
their homes, their ability to save money in monetary accounts, and the
debt
burden they face. But the wealth of the super rich has a lot more to
do with
their ability to convert existing wealth--in the form of stocks,
investment
real estate, or securities--into even more wealth, that is, to produce
"capital gains."

Sure enough, we find that when wealth
inequality was on the rise, so was the
relative importance of capital gains. Between
1962 and 1969, conventional savings--the
difference between household income and
expenditures-- accounted for 38 percent of the
growth of wealth, but from 1983 to 1989
conventional savings accounted for just 30
percent of increased wealth. Conversely,
capital gains became a bigger factor in the
'80s. The immediate causes lay in a falling
savings rate and more rapid growth in the
value of stocks than in the value of homes. In
addition, the homeownership rate (the
percentage of families owning their own home),
which had risen 1 percent during the 1960s, fell during the 1980s, by
1.7
percent. The extension of homeownership would suggest a widening
diffusion
of assets to the middle class. Alas, the homeownership rate peaked in
1980
at 65.6 percent and has been falling ever since.

Widening income inequality was clearly a factor in the growing
concentration of wealth. Income inequality did not change much during
the
1960s but has risen markedly ever since the early '70s. The wealthy
save
proportionally more than the middle class. So when the wealthy get a
larger
share of total income, their share of savings will increase even more.
Not
surprisingly, between the 1960s and 1980s, the percentage of income
saved by
the upper third of families has more than doubled, from 9.3 to 22.5
percent.
That increase was partly spurred by generous tax cuts during the
Reagan
years, which were intended precisely to bring about that result.

In contrast, the middle third of the population saved almost 5 percent
of
its income during the 1960s but by the 1980s saved virtually nothing.
This
drop in savings reflected the growing squeeze on the middle class from
stagnating incomes and rising expenses; the Reagan tax cuts did not
produce
their predicted effects on this group. The bottom third has
historically
saved none of its income, and the Reagan years did not turn them into
savers
and investors as Jack Kemp's happy vision suggested.

According to my estimates, the chief source of growing wealth
concentration
during the 1980s was capital gains. The rapid increase in stock prices
relative to house prices accounted for about 50 percent of the
increased
wealth concentration; the growing importance of capital gains relative
to
savings explained another 10 percent. Increased income inequality
during the
decade added another 18 percent, as did the increased savings
propensity of
the rich relative to the middle class. The declining homeownership
rate
accounted for the remaining 5 percent or so.

In short, wealth went to those who held wealth to begin with. For
those who
didn't have it, savings alone were not sufficient to amass wealth of
great
significance.



ARE THERE REMEDIES?

These trends raise troubling questions. Will the increasing
concentration
of wealth further exacerbate the tilt of political power toward the
rich?
Might it ultimately set off an extremist political explosion? Is it
compatible with renewed economic growth?

At least the surface evidence suggests that equality and growth are
complementary. The high growth rates of the 1950s and 1960s occurred
during
a period of low inequality. The slowdown in growth that began in the
1970s
was accompanied by rising inequality in both income and wealth. High
levels
of inequality put better training and education out of the reach of
more
workers and may breed resentment in the workplace. Analyses of
historical
data on the U.S. as well as comparative international studies confirm
a
positive association between equality and growth.

Diffusing wealth more broadly will not be easy. Some of the causes of
growing income and wealth inequality lie in changes in the global
economy
for which no one has any ready policy response. However, the
experiences of
European countries as well as our neighbor Canada, which are subject
to the
same market forces, suggest that shifting the tax burden toward the
wealthy
would spread wealth more widely. In the U.S., marginal income tax
rates,
particularly on the rich and very rich, fell sharply during the 1980s.
Although Congress raised marginal rates on the very rich in 1993,
those
rates are still considerably lower than they were at the beginning of
the
1980s. And they are much lower than in western European countries with
more
equal distributions of income and wealth.

Another strategy to consider is direct taxation of wealth. Almost a
dozen
European countries, including Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands,
Sweden, and
Switzerland, have taxes on wealth. A very modest tax on wealth (with
marginal tax rates running from 0.05 to 0.3 percent, exempting the
first
$100,000 in assets) could raise $50 billion in revenue and have a
minimal
impact on the tax bills of 90 percent of American families. Even with
an
exemption of $250,000, such a tax would raise $48 billion.

On the other side of the ledger, the financial well-being of the poor
and
lower-middle class would be much improved by social transfers similar
to
Canada's, including child support assurance, a rising minimum wage,
and
extension of the earned income tax credit.

None of these measures appears politically feasible today. Instead,
the
current majority leader of the House is promoting a flat tax that
would cut
in half income tax rates for the rich and entirely eliminate taxes on
capital gains. Many prominent Republicans have embraced the flat tax
and
argued that it should be central to the 1996 election. The rush to
give the
rich an even bigger piece of the pie ought to be stimulus enough to
start a
national conversation about where America's wealth is going.


FIGURES

Figure 1: Winners and Losers in the 1980s

Percent of real wealth and income growth accruing to the top 1, next
19, and
bottom 80 percent of families, 1983-1989.

Wealth Growth

Top 1 percent: 61.6%
Next 19: 37.2%
Bottom 80: 1.2%

Income Growth

Top 1 percent: 37.4%
Next 19: 38.9%
Bottom 80: 23.7%

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 2: Concentration of Wealth

Share of wealth owned by the top 1 percent of families, 1945-1992
(rounded
to the nearest percent)

1945: 33%
1949: 30%
1953: 34%
1958: 32%
1962: 35%
1965: 37%
1969: 34%
1972: 32%
1976: 22%
1979: 23%
1981: 27%
1983: 34%
1986: 35%
1989: 39%
1992: 42%

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 3: Mean and Median Wealth and Income

Sources: author's computations from the 1983 and 1989 Survey of
Consumer
Finances; Arthur B. Kennickell and Martha Starr-McCluer, "Changes in
Family
Finances from 1989 to 1992: Evidence from the Survey of Consumer
Finances,"
Federal Reserve Bulletin 80 (October 1994), 861-882.

Mean and median wealth and income, 1983-1992 (Wealth: to the nearest
$5,000;
Income: to the nearest $1,000). Mean to median ratio in parentheses.

Wealth:
Year      Mean      Median

1983      $155,000  $45,000
1989      $190,000  $45,000
1992      $215,000  $45,000

Income:
Year        Mean      Median

1983      $38,000        $28,000
1989      $45,000        $29,000
1992      $43,000        $28,000

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 4: ...And the Rich Get Richer

Sources: author's computations from the 1983 and 1989 Survey of
Consumer
Finances; Kennickell and Starr-McCluer, 1994.

Changing shares of wealth and income, 1983 and 1989

     Wealth, 1983                Wealth, 1989

Top 1 percent:   33.7%      Top 1 percent:  38.9%
Next 19:         47.6       Next 19:        45.7
Bottom 80:       18.7       Bottom 80:      15.4

     Income, 1983                Income, 1989
Top 1 percent:   13.4%       Top 1 percent: 16.4%
Next 19:         38.5        Next 19:       39.1
Bottom 80:       48.1        Bottom 80:     44.5

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 5: The Composition of Household Wealth, 1989

Source: authors computations from the 1989 Survey of Consumer Finances

Homes refers to owner-occupied housing; Deposits to liquid assets
(cash,
bank deposits, money market funds, cash surrender value of insurance
and
pension plans); Real Estate/Business to investment real estate and
unincorporated businesses; Stock to corporate stock, financial
securities,
personal trusts, and other assets.

The Super Rich*

Homes: 6.6%
Deposits: 11.0%
Real Estate/Business: 45.1%
Stock: 37.3%

Middle-Income Families**

Homes: 68.6%
Deposits: 17.0%
Real Estate/Business: 7.5%
Stock: 7.0%

*Defined as families in the top 1 percent of the wealth distribution,
with a
net worth of $2.35 million or more in 1989.

**Defined as families in the middle quintile, with incomes between
$21,200
and $34,300 in 1989.

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 6: Assets Held Primarily by the Wealthy

Source: Author's computations from the 1989 Survey of Consumer
Finances.

Families are classified into wealth class on the basis of their net
worth.
In the top 1 percent of the wealth distribution (the "Super Rich") are
families with a net worth of $2.35 million or more in 1989; in the
next 9
percent (the "Rich") are families with a net worth greater than or
equal to
$346,400 but less than $2.35 million; in the bottom 90 percent
(Everybody
Else) are families with a net worth less than $346,400.

Stocks

Super Rich: 46.2%
Rich: 43.1%
Everybody Else: 10.7%

Bonds

Super Rich: 54.2%
Rich: 34.3%
Everybody Else: 11.5%

Business Equity

Super Rich: 56.3%
Rich: 33.7%
Everybody Else: 10.0%

Non-Home Real Estate

Super Rich: 40.3%
Rich: 39.6%
Everybody Else: 20.0%

Trusts

Super Rich: 53.6%
Rich: 35.4%
Everybody Else: 11.0%

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure


Figure 7: Assets and Liabilities Held Primarily by the Non-Wealthy

Source: Author's computations from the 1989 Survey of Consumer
Finances.

Families are classified into wealth class on the basis of their net
worth.
In the top 1 percent of the wealth distribution (the "Super Rich"),
are
families with a net worth of $2.35 million or more in 1989; in the
next 9
percent (the "Rich") are families with a net worth greater than or
equal to
$346,400 but less than $2.35 million; in the bottom 90 percent (the
"Rest")
are families with a net worth less than $346,400.

("Deposits" includes cash, currency, demand deposits, savings and time
deposits, money market funds, certificates of deposits, and IRA and
Keogh
accounts.)

Principal Residence

Super Rich: 7.4%
Rich: 26.3%
Everybody Else: 66.3%

Life Insurance

Super Rich: 16.8%
Rich: 27.7%
Everybody Else: 55.4%

Deposits

Super Rich: 21.0%
Rich: 37.8%
Everybody Else: 41.2%

Total Debt

Super Rich: 10.1%
Rich: 19.9%
Everybody Else: 70.0%

     return to the text
     Download or view the figure



NOTES

1. See my monograph, Top Heavy: A Study of Increasing Inequality of
Wealth
in America (New York: Twentieth Century Fund, 1995) for technical
details on
the construction of this series.

return to text


                     Click here for information on the author
                                  Edward N. Wolff

Copyright � 1999 by The American Prospect, Inc. Preferred Citation:
Edward
N. Wolff, "How the Pie is Sliced: America's Growing Concentration of
Wealth," The American Prospect no. 22, Summer 1995. This article may
not be
resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind
without
prior written permission from the author. Direct questions about
permissions
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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