Rising inequality is the root of affordability problems
When most peopleincluding policymakerscomplain about a lack of affordability, they think of prices being too high. But affordability is the outcome of a race between prices and incomes. After all, goods and services were a lot cheaper 90 years ago during the Great Depression, but we all know that nearly everybody is richer today than their peers back then. Bringing incomes into the affordability picture makes for better understanding and better policy.
New Congressional Budget Office (CBO) data show that rising income inequality is the main reason that affordability feels out of reach for too many U.S. families. For more than four decades, most of the income growth in the U.S. economy has been funneled to those at the very top, leaving typical families with far less than their proportionate share of the economys gains. If middle-class household incomes had simply kept pace with average income growth since 1979, their pay would be roughly $30,000 higher today. If we account for taxes and government transfers, incomes would still be $19,000 higher today for these middle-class households. Think of this gap as an inequality tax: the amount that rising inequality has cost the typical U.S. family. Life would be much more affordable for these families today if they hadnt been hit by this inequality tax.
This inequality is not the result of competitive markets fairly rewarding peoples skills and hard work. Instead, it resulted from an intentional policy campaign of wage suppression. Labor markets in capitalist economies are inherently tilted toward employers. Fair pay and broadly shared prosperity only materialize when policy affirmatively aims to correct this power imbalance. This can happenpolicy choices that bolstered workers leverage and bargaining power in labor markets kept growth fast and equal for decades following World War II, for example. But lawmakers rolled back these policies at the behest of capital owners and corporate managers.
The latest CBO inequality data make the scale of this policy shift visible. Figure A shows the distribution of market income growth for non-elderly households by income group since 1979. We use market income to look at pre-tax, pre-transfer outcomes to assess the equality of outcomes generated by markets. We isolate non-elderly incomes because older households tend to have very low market incomes and these older households have grown as a share over timeso we dont want any poor performance of market incomes documented here to simply be the outcome of natural population aging. Among this non-elderly group, the top 1% have captured a hugely disproportionate share of market income growth. Between 1979 and 2022, market income for the top 1% grew 277% (from $784,573 to $2.958 million) compared with just 26% growth for the middle fifth of households (from $76,359 to $96,335). This lopsided growth is the root of Americas affordability problem. Even as the economy grew and average incomes rose, typical families fell further behind those at the top who captured most of income growth.
https://www.epi.org/blog/rising-inequality-is-the-root-of-affordability-problems/
everyonematters
(4,262 posts)valleyrogue
(2,798 posts)In short, neoliberal economic ideas drove a stake in the US standard of living.
Barlett and Steel wrote about this issue thirty years or more ago with the "America: What Went Wrong" series of articles and books.
By the way, single people are far more negatively affected than "families.* We aren't living in the 1950s where virtually all adults were married with children.