Topic: As the rich get richer.....
Dragoness's photo
Mon 03/05/12 01:13 PM
Richest 1 Percent Account For Nearly All Of U.S. Recovery's Gains: Report

The Huffington Post Alexander Eichler
First Posted: 03/ 5/2012 11:31 am Updated: 03/ 5/2012 1:11 pm


Technically, the economy has been in recovery for two years. But it turns out the rich have been doing most of the recovering.

In 2010 -- the first full year since the end of the Great Recession -- virtually all of the income growth in America took place among the country's very wealthiest people, says an economist at the University of California, Berkeley. The top 1 percent of earners took in a full 93 percent of all the income gains that year, leaving the other 7 percent of gains to be sprinkled among the vast majority of society.

Those numbers come courtesy of Emmanuel Saez, the Berkeley economist who co-created a resource known as the World Top Incomes Database. Saez and his colleagues crunched the data on income growth from 2010, the most recent year available, and found that it was shockingly lopsided.

While much of the country is simply treading water, with a growing number of people either edging toward poverty or already there, the richest of the rich seem to be coping nicely.

Saez's findings suggest that even though the recession dealt a blow to the 1 percent, it did little to push the U.S. off the path it's been on for decades -- that of a vast and growing disparity between the richest and poorest citizens.

Income for most workers has barely risen in the last 30 years, but the top 1 percent of earners have seen their income almost triple in the same amount of time. Economists and other experts say that could be the result of any number of factors, including the decline of labor unions, the explosion in capital gains during the middle part of the aughts, and tax policies put in place in recent years that favor the wealthy.

In his State of the Union address this past January, President Obama called economic fairness "the defining issue of our time," perhaps mindful of the growing number of voters who say they can't even afford basic necessities like food.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/05/1-percent-income-inequality_n_1321008.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000009


We need a more fair tax rate on the rich.

I hope Obama can get congress to do it after he gets reelected.

InvictusV's photo
Mon 03/05/12 01:24 PM
Consider these numbers:

Nearly half of the members of Congress are millionaires, according to the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), a Washington watchdog.

The median net worth of a U.S. senator was $2.63 million in 2010, the most recent year for which financial data are available. That was up 11% from the year before, says CRP.

The median estimated net worth for House members was $756,765.

The median net worth of House members almost tripled from 1984 and 2009, while the net worth of Americans declined slightly during the same time, according to the Washington Post and the University of Michigan.

http://money.msn.com/investing/latest.aspx?post=70cc8f98-07b4-4e4e-923e-5569bd82627d/

They are really going to raise taxes on themselves.. haha

no photo
Mon 03/05/12 04:02 PM
yes more hope and more change lol


learn whats really going on today

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUpZhhbKUBo

heavenlyboy34's photo
Mon 03/05/12 04:16 PM
Edited by heavenlyboy34 on Mon 03/05/12 04:18 PM
Why do people keep citing the economic illiterates at HuffPo? They ignore every econometric relevant to the topic. (although it is true that the poor and middle class are seeing their savings destroyed and prices inflated while cronies with connections to the political elite are getting backdoor goodies and bailouts)