Perhaps not entirely true, but too true for comfort. The sobering fact is that 
We may not be the 1%, but are certainly the 20%...


http://evonomics.com/america-regressing-developing-nation-people/

America is Regressing into a Developing Nation for Most People
The U.S. is no longer one country, but dividing into two separate economic and 
political worlds

By Lynn Parramore

You’ve probably heard the news that the celebrated post-WW II beating heart of 
America known as the middle class has gone from “burdened,” to “squeezed” to 
“dying.”  But you might have heard less about what exactly is emerging in its 
place.

In a new book, The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice and Power in a Dual 
Economy, Peter Temin, Professor Emeritus of Economics at MIT, draws a portrait 
of the new reality in a way that is frighteningly, indelibly clear:  America is 
not one country anymore. It is becoming two, each with vastly different 
resources, expectations, and fates.

Two roads diverged

In one of these countries live members of what Temin calls the “FTE sector” 
(named for finance, technology, and electronics, the industries which largely 
support its growth). These are the 20 percent of Americans who enjoy college 
educations, have good jobs, and sleep soundly knowing that they have not only 
enough money to meet life’s challenges, but also social networks to bolster 
their success. They grow up with parents who read books to them, tutors to help 
with homework, and plenty of stimulating things to do and places to go. They 
travel in planes and drive new cars. The citizens of this country see economic 
growth all around them and exciting possibilities for the future. They make 
plans, influence policies, and count themselves as lucky to be Americans.

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The FTE citizens rarely visit the country where the other 80 percent of 
Americans live: the low-wage sector. Here, the world of possibility is 
shrinking, often dramatically. People are burdened with debt and anxious about 
their insecure jobs if they have a job at all. Many of them are getting sicker 
and dying younger than they used to. They get around by crumbling public 
transport and cars they have trouble paying for. Family life is uncertain here; 
people often don’t partner for the long-term even when they have children. If 
they go to college, they finance it by going heavily into debt. They are not 
thinking about the future; they are focused on surviving the present. The world 
in which they reside is very different from the one they were taught to believe 
in. While members of the first country act, these people are acted upon.

The two sectors, notes Temin, have entirely distinct financial systems, 
residential situations, and educational opportunities. Quite different things 
happen when they get sick, or when they interact with the law. They move 
independently of each other. Only one path exists by which the citizens of the 
low-wage country can enter the affluent one, and that path is fraught with 
obstacles. Most have no way out.

The richest large economy in the world, says Temin, is coming to have an 
economic and political structure more like a developing nation. We have entered 
a phase of regression, and one of the easiest ways to see it is in our 
infrastructure: our roads and bridges look more like those in Thailand or 
Venezuela than the Netherlands or Japan. But it goes far deeper than that, 
which is why Temin uses a famous economic model created to understand 
developing nations to describe how far inequality has progressed in the United 
States. The model is the work of West Indian economist W. Arthur Lewis, the 
only person of African descent to win a Nobel Prize in economics. For the first 
time, this model is applied with systematic precision to the U.S.

The result is profoundly disturbing.

In the Lewis model of a dual economy, much of the low-wage sector has little 
influence over public policy. Check. The high-income sector will keep wages 
down in the other sector to provide cheap labor for its businesses. Check. 
Social control is used to keep the low-wage sector from challenging the 
policies favored by the high-income sector. Mass incarceration – check. The 
primary goal of the richest members of the high-income sector is to lower 
taxes. Check. Social and economic mobility is low. Check.

In the developing countries Lewis studied, people try to move from the low-wage 
sector to the affluent sector by transplanting from rural areas to the city to 
get a job. Occasionally it works; often it doesn’t. Temin says that today in 
the U.S., the ticket out is education, which is difficult for two reasons: you 
have to spend money over a long period of time, and the FTE sector is making 
those expenditures more and more costly by defunding public schools and making 
policies that increase student debt burdens.

Getting a good education, Temin observes, isn’t just about a college degree. It 
has to begin in early childhood, and you need parents who can afford to spend 
time and resources all along the long journey. If you aspire to college and 
your family can’t make transfers of money to you on the way, well, good luck to 
you. Even with a diploma, you will likely find that high-paying jobs come from 
networks of peers and relatives. Social capital, as well as economic capital, 
is critical, but because of America’s long history of racism and the obstacles 
it has created for accumulating both kinds of capital, black graduates often 
can only find jobs in education, social work, and government instead of 
higher-paying professional jobs like technology or finance— something most 
white people are not really aware of. Women are also held back by a long 
history of sexism and the burdens — made increasingly heavy — of making greater 
contributions to the unpaid care economy and lack of access to crucial 
healthcare.

How did we get this way?

What happened to America’s middle class, which rose triumphantly in the 
post-World War II years, buoyed by the GI bill, the victories of labor unions, 
and programs that gave the great mass of workers and their families health and 
pension benefits that provided security?

The dual economy didn’t happen overnight, says Temin. The story started just a 
couple of years after the ’67 Summer of Love. Around 1970, the productivity of 
workers began to get divided from their wages. Corporate attorney and later 
Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell galvanized the business community to lobby 
vigorously for its interests. Johnson’s War on Poverty was replaced by Nixon’s 
War on Drugs, which sectioned off many members of the low-wage sector, 
disproportionately black, into prisons. Politicians increasingly influenced by 
the FTE sector turned from public-spirited universalism to free-market 
individualism. As money-driven politics accelerated (a phenomenon explained by 
the Investment Theory of Politics, as Temin explains), leaders of the FTE 
sector became increasingly emboldened to ignore the needs of members of the 
low-wage sector, or even to actively work against them.

America’s underlying racism has a continuing distorting impact. A majority of 
the low-wage sector is white, with blacks and Latinos making up the other part, 
but politicians learned to talk as if the low-wage sector is mostly black 
because it allowed them to appeal to racial prejudice, which is useful in 
maintaining support for the structure of the dual economy — and hurting 
everyone in the low-wage sector. Temin notes that “the desire to preserve the 
inferior status of blacks has motivated policies against all members of the 
low-wage sector.”

Temin points out that the presidential race of 2016 both revealed and amplified 
the anger of the low-wage sector at this increasing imbalance. Low-wage whites 
who had been largely invisible in public policy until recently came out of 
their quiet despair to be heard. Unfortunately, present trends are not only 
continuing, but also accelerating their problems, freezing the dual economy 
into place.

What can we do?

We’ve been digging ourselves into a hole for over forty years, but Temin says 
that we know how to stop digging. If we spent more on domestic rather than 
military activities, then the middle class would not vanish as quickly. The 
effects of technological change and globalization could be altered by political 
actions. We could restore and expand education, shifting resources from 
policies like mass incarceration to improving the human and social capital of 
all Americans. We could upgrade infrastructure, forgive mortgage and 
educational debt in the low-wage sector, reject the notion that private 
entities should replace democratic government in directing society, and focus 
on embracing an integrated American population. We could tax not only the 
income of the rich, but also their capital.

The cost of not doing these things, Temin warns, is incalculably high, and even 
the rich will end up paying for it:

“Look at the movie, Hidden Figures: It recounts a very dramatic story about 
three African American women condemned to have a life of not being paid very 
well teaching in black colleges, and yet their fates changed when they were 
tapped by NASA to contribute to space exploration. Today we are losing the 
ability to find people like that. We have a structure that predetermines 
winners and losers. We are not getting the benefits of all the people who could 
contribute to the growth of the economy, to advances in medicine or science 
which could improve the quality of life for everyone — including some of the 
rich people.”

Along with Thomas Piketty, whose Capital in the Twenty-First Century examines 
historical and modern inequality, Temin’s book has provided a giant red flag, 
illustrating a trajectory that will continue to accelerate as long as the 20 
percent in the FTE sector are permitted to operate a country within America’s 
borders solely for themselves at the expense of the majority. Without a robust 
middle class, America is not only reverting to developing-country status, it is 
increasingly ripe for serious social turmoil that has not been seen in 
generations.

A dual economy has separated America from the idea of what most of us thought 
the country was meant to be. 

Originally posted at the Institute for New Economic Thinking.

2017 April 29

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