Book Review: The New Class Society: Goodbye American Dream?

http://www.politicalaffairs.net/article/view/9296/1/387/?PrintableVersion=enabled

By Harry Targ
Diary of a Heartland Radical

I am using a text by Robert Perrucci and Earl Wysong called New Class
Society: Goodbye American Dream? (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008) in a
course called “The Politics of Capital and Labor.” The authors review
and synthesize a variety of definitions of class from political theory
and sociology.

Their answer to the question of what is class draws upon Marxian
notions of relations of production, Max Weber’s ideas about persons in
various organizational positions, and the more conventional view of
class as relating to the distribution of income, wealth, and power.

Using data reflecting their synthetic definition of class, the authors
conclude that the portrait of a U.S. class system consisting of a
small ruling class, a large “middle class,” and a small percentage of
economically and politically marginalized people is no longer an
accurate way to describe society. The class system of the days of
relative prosperity from the 1940s until the late 1960s, which looked
like a diamond with a broad middle, has become like a class system
looking like a “double diamond.”

In this new class society, the first diamond, the top one, consists of
the “privileged class” composed of a “super-class,” “credentialed
class managers,” and “professionals.” All together these
representatives of privilege constitute about 20 percent of the
population. All the others constitute a “new working class,” some
living in relative comfort but most engaged in wage labor, modest
self-employment, or part-time work. This is the second diamond
representing 80 percent of the population.

Students in my course have been debating some of the formulations but
certain elements of the text have been uniformly accepted by them.
First, everyone seems to accept the double-diamond metaphor as a way
of conceptualizing the distribution of wealth, income, and power.

Those in the top diamond representing privilege are relatively assured
that their sources of income and wealth are permanent. Their
sustenance and family stability are assured while the other 80
percent, the model suggests, live economically marginal existences and
in conditions of precariousness.

My students raise no objections about what Perrucci and Wysong regard
as broadly accepted features of this new class system.

First, since the 1970s, there has been increasing class polarization.
Gaps in distributions of wealth and income have grown. Real wages of
workers have stagnated since the 1970s. In addition, workplace
benefits have declined, including pensions. Permanent jobs have been
replaced by contingent labor. The percentage of unionization of the
work force has declined by two-thirds.

The authors cite a recent study that estimates that only one-fourth of
jobs today are “good jobs," paying at least $16 an hour. And, on the
other hand, the share of income and wealth accumulated by the top one
percent or 10 percent or 20 percent, the entire privileged class, has
risen. The rich have gotten richer while the poor poorer.

Second, since the 1980s, workers and their families have experienced
downward mobility, that is their social and economic position has
declined. This has occurred because stable, well paying jobs have
disappeared due to outsourcing, capital flight, and
deindustrialization. By any number of measures, the “American Dream”
of helping one’s children to move up the status ladder has been
reversed.

Third, the increasing accumulation of wealth and power through tax
cuts, deregulation of financialization, and declining government
support for public services have encouraged the privileged to embark
on class secession.

Increasingly, the authors suggest, the privileged class withdraws its
support for public institutions as it funds its own private schools,
libraries, recreational facilities, and additional social services.
The rich build gated communities, electrify their fences, hire private
guards to protect themselves, and create private institutions to
replace public ones.

The authors refer to Robert Reich’s “secession of the successful”
which they say “combines traditional forms of physical and social
separation and increasing numbers of privately provided services with
the ideology of neoliberalism, an idea system of free market
fundamentalism that encourages and legitimates hostility to public
institutions.” They conclude that “class secession today involves both
a separatist social identity and a conscious secessionistic
mentality.”

The findings reported in The New Class Society about class in America
are profound. Long-term trends in the United States since the 1970s
have led to growing wealth and power at one pole and increasing
immiseration at the other pole. The idea of a broad middle class is
further away from reality than ever.

For the vast majority of Americans economic security is declining.
And, most important, the privileged class, which has built its wealth
and power on the growing immiseration of the new working class, is
physically, financially, and ideologically seceding from the system
that historically claimed to provide at least some institutional
support for enrichment of the citizenry at large.

The authors also present data to show how the brutality of the new
class society particularly impacts on people of color, women,
immigrants, and other traditionally marginalized people.

While the task of my course is to study the underlying fundamental
features of American society, particularly those bearing on political
economy, the implications of this analysis for practical political
work seem obvious.

First, progressives need to “make class analysis relevant to our
organizing.” This includes educating ourselves and those we work with
about the ways in which society is divided into classes based upon how
people are related to the workplace, the status and power of workers
in different organizational positions, the distribution of wealth and
income in society and the history of class in America.

Our educational work must show how class relates to race, gender and
the environment. In the end we must construct a compelling vision for
the abolition of our class divided society.

Second, progressives must articulate in every political setting those
experiences of class that vast majorities of the people share.

Years ago Harry Braverman, in Labor and Monopoly Capital demonstrated
that work was being transformed by the capitalist system; that
patterns of control of the minds and actions of workers were being
increasingly controlled by a deepening division of labor, and that the
work process, whether white collar or blue collar, service or
manufacturing, was being homogenized. He and others called this
process of work transformation, “proletarianization.”

This historic development argues for a political strategy that
prioritizes education about the growing commonality of work experience
of those in the bottom 80 percent of the work force.

Third, progressives must articulate programs of education and action
that seek to deepen understanding of barriers to solidarity resulting
from race, gender, and even political ideology. Progressives must be
more mindful of the different experiences of class in America, such as
the historic role of slavery and immigrant labor, super-exploitation
of African Americans and women, and ethnic discrimination.

The articulation of the different experiences of class through race
and gender should be used to broaden understanding of how those
differences were used to increase class exploitation of all those in
the majority.

Fourth, progressives should began to analyze the ways in which many of
the new right wing “tea party” activists share a common experience of
class. Education and advocacy must more clearly be based upon an
understanding of the common interests privileged class Republicans and
Democrats share and the reality of interests shared by the new working
class majority.

In the end there is no substitute for building what activists used to
call “class consciousness.” The realities of class exploitation, as
Perrucci and Wysong suggest, seem more obvious than ever. They just
need to become a central element of our political discourse.

--Harry Tarq is a professor in American Studies who lives in West
Lafayette, Indiana. He blogs at Diary of a Heartland Radical.
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