The American Middle Class Is No Longer the World’s Richest

I fault Americans for this. We deserve what we get. Corporations ship American jobs overseas, evade paying American taxes, fight against unions, fight against any laws that would empower the American worker while flocking to Republican dominated Southern states which are known for being hostile to worker protection regulations and they have successfully convinced American workers our skills are worth "less and less" while Executive Pay has skyrocketed...... and Americans have sheepishly allowed this. 

SHAME ON US 



The American middle class, long the most affluent in the world, has lost that distinction.

While the wealthiest Americans are outpacing many of their global peers, a New York Times analysis shows that across the lower- and middle-income tiers, citizens of other advanced countries have received considerably larger raises over the last three decades.

After-tax middle-class incomes in Canada — substantially behind in 2000 — now appear to be higher than in the United States. The poor in much of Europe earn more than poor Americans.

The numbers, based on surveys conducted over the past 35 years, offer some of the most detailed publicly available comparisons for different income groups in different countries over time. They suggest that most American families are paying a steep price for high and rising income inequality

Although economic growth in the United States continues to be as strong as in many other countries, or stronger, a small percentage of American households is fully benefiting from it. Median income in Canada pulled into a tie with median United States income in 2010 and has most likely surpassed it since then. Median incomes in Western European countries still trail those in the United States, but the gap in several — including Britain, the Netherlands and Sweden — is much smaller than it was a decade ago.


In European countries hit hardest by recent financial crises, such as Greece and Portugal, incomes have of course fallen sharply in recent years.

The income data were compiled by LIS, a group that maintains the Luxembourg Income Study Database. The numbers were analyzed by researchers at LIS and by The Upshot, a New York Times website covering policy and politics, and reviewed by outside academic economists.

The struggles of the poor in the United States are even starker than those of the middle class. A family at the 20th percentile of the income distribution in this country makes significantly less money than a similar family in Canada, Sweden, Norway, Finland or the Netherlands. Thirty-five years ago, the reverse was true.

LIS counts after-tax cash income from salaries, interest and stock dividends, among other sources, as well as direct government benefits such as tax credits.

The findings are striking because the most commonly cited economic statistics — such as per capita gross domestic product — continue to show that the United States has maintained its lead as the world’s richest large country. But those numbers are averages, which do not capture the distribution of income. With a big share of recent income gains in this country flowing to a relatively small slice of high-earning households, most Americans are not keeping pace with their counterparts around the world.

“The idea that the median American has so much more income than the middle class in all other parts of the world is not true these days,” saidLawrence Katz, a Harvard economist who is not associated with LIS. “In 1960, we were massively richer than anyone else. In 1980, we were richer. In the 1990s, we were still richer.”

That is no longer the case, Professor Katz added.

Median per capita income was $18,700 in the United States in 2010 (which translates to about $75,000 for a family of four after taxes), up 20 percent since 1980 but virtually unchanged since 2000, after adjusting for inflation. The same measure, by comparison, rose about 20 percent in Britain between 2000 and 2010 and 14 percent in the Netherlands. Median income also rose 20 percent in Canada between 2000 and 2010, to the equivalent of $18,700.



The most recent year in the LIS analysis is 2010. But other income surveys, conducted by government agencies, suggest that since 2010 pay in Canada has risen faster than pay in the United States and is now most likely higher. Pay in several European countries has also risen faster since 2010 than it has in the United States.

Three broad factors appear to be driving much of the weak income performance in the United States. First, educational attainment in the United States has risen far more slowly than in much of the industrialized world over the last three decades, making it harder for the American economy to maintain its share of highly skilled, well-paying jobs.

Americans between the ages of 55 and 65 have literacy, numeracy and technology skills that are above average relative to 55- to 65-year-olds in rest of the industrialized world, according to a recent study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, an international group. Younger Americans, though, are not keeping pace: Those between 16 and 24 rank near the bottom among rich countries, well behind their counterparts in Canada, Australia, Japan and Scandinavia and close to those in Italy and Spain.

A second factor is that companies in the United States economy distribute a smaller share of their bounty to the middle class and poor than similar companies elsewhere. Top executives make substantially more money in the United States than in other wealthy countries. The minimum wage is lower. Labor unions are weaker.

And because the total bounty produced by the American economy has not been growing substantially faster here in recent decades than in Canada or Western Europe, most American workers are left receiving meager raises.

Finally, governments in Canada and Western Europe take more aggressive steps to raise the take-home pay of low- and middle-income households by redistributing income.

Janet Gornick, the director of LIS, noted that inequality in so-called market incomes — which does not count taxes or government benefits — “is high but not off the charts in the United States.” Yet the American rich pay lower taxes than the rich in many other places, and the United States does not redistribute as much income to the poor as other countries do. As a result, inequality in disposable income is sharply higher in the United States than elsewhere.

Whatever the causes, the stagnation of income has left many Americansdissatisfied with the state of the country. Only about 30 percent of people believe the country is headed in the right direction, polls show.

“Things are pretty flat,” said Kathy Washburn, 59, of Mount Vernon, Iowa, who earns $33,000 at an Ace Hardware store, where she has worked for 23 years. “You have mostly lower level and high and not a lot in between. People need to start in between to work their way up.”

Middle-class families in other countries are obviously not without worries — some common around the world and some specific to their countries. In many parts of Europe, as in the United States, parents of young children wonder how they will pay for college, and many believe their parents enjoyed more rapidly rising living standards than they do. In Canada, people complain about the costs of modern life, from college to monthly phone and Internet bills. Unemployment is a concern almost everywhere.

But both opinion surveys and interviews suggest that the public mood in Canada and Northern Europe is less sour than in the United States today.

“The crisis had no effect on our lives,” Jonas Frojelin, 37, a Swedish firefighter, said, referring to the global financial crisis that began in 2007. He lives with his wife, Malin, a nurse, in a seaside town a half-hour drive from Gothenburg, Sweden’s second-largest city.

They each have five weeks of vacation and comprehensive health benefits. They benefited from almost three years of paid leave, between them, after their children, now 3 and 6 years old, were born. Today, the children attend a subsidized child-care center that costs about 3 percent of the Frojelins’ income.

Even with a large welfare state in Sweden, per capita G.D.P. there has grown more quickly than in the United States over almost any extended recent period — a decade, 20 years, 30 years. Sharp increases in the number of college graduates in Sweden, allowing for the growth of high-skill jobs, has played an important role.

Other countries’ middle class incomes have grown since 2000. The United States’ has not.



Elsewhere in Europe, economic growth has been slower in the last few years than in the United States, as the Continent has struggled to escape the financial crisis. But incomes for most families in Sweden and several other Northern European countries have still outpaced those in the United States, where much of the fruits of recent economic growth have flowed into corporate profits or top incomes.

This pattern suggests that future data gathered by LIS are likely to show similar trends to those through 2010.

There does not appear to be any other publicly available data that allows for the comparisons that the LIS data makes possible. But two other sources lead to broadly similar conclusions.

A Gallup survey conducted between 2006 and 2012 showed the United States and Canada with nearly identical per capita median income (and Scandinavia with higher income). And tax records collected by Thomas Piketty and other economists suggest that the United States no longer has the highest average income among the bottom 90 percent of earners.

One large European country where income has stagnated over the past 15 years is Germany, according to the LIS data. Policy makers in Germany have taken a series of steps to hold down the cost of exports, including restraining wage growth.

Even in Germany, though, the poor have fared better than in the United States, where per capita income has declined between 2000 and 2010 at the 40th percentile, as well as at the 30th, 20th, 10th and 5th.

Stability in Sweden

Malin Frojelin lives with her two children, Engla, 6, and Nils, 3, in Vallda, Sweden, along with her husband, Jonas. Vallda is about a 30-minute drive from Gothenburg, the second-largest city in the country. Casper Hedberg for The New York Times

More broadly, the poor in the United States have trailed their counterparts in at least a few other countries since the early 1980s. With slow income growth since then, the American poor now clearly trail the poor in several other rich countries. At the 20th percentile — where someone is making less than four-fifths of the population — income in both the Netherlands and Canada was 15 percent higher than income in the United States in 2010.

By contrast, Americans at the 95th percentile of the distribution — with $58,600 in after-tax per capita income, not including capital gains — still make 20 percent more than their counterparts in Canada, 26 percent more than those in Britain and 50 percent more than those in the Netherlands. For these well-off families, the United States still has easily the world’s most prosperous major economy.


Rachel Z. Arndt contributed reporting from Mount Vernon, Iowa, and David Crouch from Vallda, Sweden.

The Upshot provides news, analysis and data visualization about politics, policy and everyday life. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.





grownup

 New York City 10 minutes ago

In my 66 years I've watched decent paid jobs transferred first to the non-union south and then to 3rd world countries. I watched union membership decline so that companies can pay low wages and benefits without fear of being unionized. I watched corporations cut wages during the last recession just because they could. I watched employers instead of fighting increased costs for medical coverage transfer those costs to employees. I watched public employees salaries decline and pensions disappear. I watched the rise of the tea party whose members seem to believe the problem is taxes and not the transfer of wealth to the 1%. I wasn't silent while this happened but not enough people cared to listen or act. I am not surprised just overwhemingly sad for my grand children. Hopefully the revolution

muezzin

 Vernal 11 minutes ago
One gargantuan difference between European, Australian and American middle classes is American docility. Americans are willing to swallow the rigged pay-to-play political system, the obscene setup at the Wall Street (flash trading? Goldman Sachs?), the cozy featherbedding between the CEOs and their boards, the tax lowering regimes which benefit the Kochs... partly because 'liberal', 'socialist', 'equality', 'revolution' have become dirty words.




margie

 PA 11 minutes ago

After decades of importing poor, uneducated, unskilled people from around the world, voila, the country has ceded its position as leading others to the promised land. The system can no longer provide opportunity; it's too busy providing food stamps.




AD

 New York 8 hours ago

How many more studies like this will it take to finally make us question the wisdom of free-market economic fundamentalism in large enough numbers that we stop supporting movements and politicians - Paul Ryan, Rand Paul, the Tea Party and libertarianism - that seek to keep us tethered to it?

Let's not forget why people like Ryan are in office and why the GOP must cater to the Tea Party: People vote for them. These are people who've been tricked to thinking that anything to the left of Reaganomics is "socialism" and therefore unacceptable, even when it produces better results. Even many liberals are accustomed to thinking of the Swedish and Canadian economic models as "socialist," when all they really are is capitalism that addresses the inequities that inevitably result from unfettered free markets, despite the empty promises of libertarian and free-market economists that free markets lead to some imaginary equilibrium.






Justin Markuson

 Massachusetts 3 hours ago

So...Canada just surpassed the US in middle-class wealth and income, and Europe's poorest citizens are richer than the U.S.' poorest citizens...Let's see if we can find at least one common denominator between Canada and most of Europe...hmmm, got to think about this one. Is it austerity? No. Largest military? Certainly not. This is a tough one. Could it be because both regions utilize a single payer health care system? That just might be it. Get with it America.

Not saying a single payer system will solve all of our woes, but at least we can build a strong lower and middle class around it. That, in turn, will generate government revenue, human capital, employment, and will ideally stabilize our economy; this, of course, is on top of other fiscal and monetary policies that encourage growth, income equality, and social mobility, and discourage rampant speculative practices on wall street and other sectors of the economy that have negative influences on poverty and the price of commodities (such as basic health care and education).



NotSoFast

 Chicago 3 hours ago

I always find the comparison fascinating when I visit my middle class friends in Britain, verses visits with my fellow middle class friends here in the US. My Britain connections regularly engage me in American political conversations, which they're actually quite versed at, while my US connections talk mostly of sports and Hollywood. In Britain, the majority of my friends appear to live within, if not below, their financial means as that seems apparent by their modestly sized houses/apartments and by their lack of material things. Many, if not most, of my US friends have what I consider to be large suburban homes (compared to my small but manageable place) far from their jobs, multiple cars, and rooms and basements full of 'stuff'. My British friends often have people over for dinner, my US friends meet out regularly at restaurants. Well, you get the idea.

Politics and policies aside for a moment, but I'm not so sure our government is solely responsible for the decline in all sectors of our middle class.

Tom

 Rochester NY 4 hours ago
Yes, we know. I worked at a well known corporation for 35 years before being laid off at 59 in 2012. i worked in the engineering and research departments. A raise of 2.5 percent was considered a wildly high pay increase. A 1.5 pay increase for a good performer was normal. Guess what the inflation rate was? I know the raises never kept up. I received my only cost of living increase back in the 70s when inflation was high for a time. The corporate officers got all the gravy. At the end of my career the corporation broke promises and decreased my severance pay, lump sum payment, and retiree health care benefits. I'm am not whining, because the middle-class are not ones to whine or protest, we just toughen up, go on, and hope someday things will get better. The politicians don't have to worry about angry protests in front of the White House or on the Mall from us. We wouldn't know the first thing about raising our voices in anger as so many other groups do. At least not yet.


Wingspan Portfolio Advisors Blogspot