hvactec
VIP Member
11/04/11
Until we reverse the trend toward inequality, the economy cant be revived
The biggest question in America these days is how to revive the economy.
The biggest question among activists now occupying Wall Street and dozens of other cities is how to strike back against the nations almost unprecedented concentration of income, wealth, and political power in the top 1 percent.
The two questions are related. With so much income and wealth concentrated at the top, the vast middle class no longer has the purchasing power to buy what the economy is capable of producing. (People could pretend otherwise as long as they could treat their homes as ATMs, but those days are now gone.) The result is prolonged stagnation and high unemployment as far as the eye can see.
RELATED: Six reasons why America can't create jobs
Until we reverse the trend toward inequality, the economy cant be revived.
But the biggest question in our nations capital right now has nothing to do with any of this. Its whether Congresss so-called Supercommittee six Democrats and six Republicans charged with coming up with $1.2 trillion in budget savings will reach agreement in time for the Congressional Budget Office to score its proposal, which must then be approved by Congress before Christmas recess in order to avoid an automatic $1.5 trillion in budget savings requiring major across-the-board cuts starting in 2013.
Have your eyes already glazed over?
Diffident Democrats on the Supercommittee have already signaled a willingness to cut Medicare, Social Security, and much else that Americans depend on. The deal is being held up by Regressive Republicans who wont raise taxes on the rich not even a tiny bit.
President Obama, meanwhile, is out on the stump trying to sell his jobs bill which would, by the White Houses own estimate, create fewer than 2 million jobs. Yet 14 million people are out of work, and another 10 million are working part-time whod rather have full-time jobs.
Republicans have already voted down his jobs bill anyway.
The disconnect between Washington and the rest of the nation hasnt been this wide since the late 1960s.
read more Fix income inequality, fix the economy - CSMonitor.com
Until we reverse the trend toward inequality, the economy cant be revived
The biggest question in America these days is how to revive the economy.
The biggest question among activists now occupying Wall Street and dozens of other cities is how to strike back against the nations almost unprecedented concentration of income, wealth, and political power in the top 1 percent.
The two questions are related. With so much income and wealth concentrated at the top, the vast middle class no longer has the purchasing power to buy what the economy is capable of producing. (People could pretend otherwise as long as they could treat their homes as ATMs, but those days are now gone.) The result is prolonged stagnation and high unemployment as far as the eye can see.
RELATED: Six reasons why America can't create jobs
Until we reverse the trend toward inequality, the economy cant be revived.
But the biggest question in our nations capital right now has nothing to do with any of this. Its whether Congresss so-called Supercommittee six Democrats and six Republicans charged with coming up with $1.2 trillion in budget savings will reach agreement in time for the Congressional Budget Office to score its proposal, which must then be approved by Congress before Christmas recess in order to avoid an automatic $1.5 trillion in budget savings requiring major across-the-board cuts starting in 2013.
Have your eyes already glazed over?
Diffident Democrats on the Supercommittee have already signaled a willingness to cut Medicare, Social Security, and much else that Americans depend on. The deal is being held up by Regressive Republicans who wont raise taxes on the rich not even a tiny bit.
President Obama, meanwhile, is out on the stump trying to sell his jobs bill which would, by the White Houses own estimate, create fewer than 2 million jobs. Yet 14 million people are out of work, and another 10 million are working part-time whod rather have full-time jobs.
Republicans have already voted down his jobs bill anyway.
The disconnect between Washington and the rest of the nation hasnt been this wide since the late 1960s.
read more Fix income inequality, fix the economy - CSMonitor.com