Occupy Wall Street is not known for the precision of its economic analysis, but new research on income distribution in the United States shows that the group’s sloganeering provides a stunningly accurate picture of the economy. In 2010, a ccording to a study published this month by University of California economist Emmanuel Saez, 93 percent of income growth went to the wealthiest 1 percent of American households, while everyone else divvied up the 7 percent that was left over. Put another way: The most fundamental characteristic of the U.S. economy today is the divide between the 1 percent and the 99 percent.
It was not ever thus. In the recovery that followed the downturn of the early 1990s, the wealthiest 1 percent captured 45 percent of the nation’s income growth. In the recovery that followed the dot-com bust 10 years ago, Saez noted, 65 percent of the income growth went to the top 1 percent. This time around, it’s reached 93 percent — a level so high it shakes the foundations of the entire American project.
While never putting a premium on economic equality, America has always prided itself on being the preeminent land of economic opportunity. If all of this nation’s wealth is captured by a narrow stratum of the very rich, however, that claim is relegated to history’s dustbin. Research by Julia Isaacs of the Brookings Institution, as part of the Economic Mobility Project, has shown that intergenerational mobility in the United States has fallen far below the levels in Germany, Finland, Denmark and other more social democratic nations of Northern Europe. Now, Saez’s analysis of income data provides further evidence that mocks America’s self-image as a land where hard work yields rewards.
How has the top 1 percent been able to decouple itself from the nation beneath it? To begin, much of its income comes from investments in funds and firms that are raking in profits from overseas ventures in economies like China’s, which weathered the downturn better than ours. Much of those firms’ profits also derive from their reduced labor costs — the result of layoffs and paycuts. Finally, as Saez points out, there has been “an explosion of top wages and salaries” since 1970. In that year, 5.1 percent of all wages and salaries paid in the United States went to the wealthiest 1 percent. In 2007, the share going to the wealthiest 1 percent had more than doubled, to 12.4 percent.
The consequences of this concentration of wealth and income extend beyond the purely economic. A middle class enduring prolonged stagnation isn’t likely to fund projects the nation needs to undertake — such as rebuilding our infrastructure or increasing teacher pay — or, ultimately, to retain its faith in the efficacy of democracy. The rise of super PACs, the low rates of taxation on capital gains and hedge fund operators, the ability of the major banks to fend off reform — all testify to the power of a neo-plutocracy beyond democratic control.
Most proposals to restore a modicum of balance to the American economy focus on making the tax code more progressive. Raising the tax on investments to the level of the tax on wages, for instance, and increasing the inheritance tax would help start reconstruction of a more viable economy.
But changes to the tax code, indispensable though they would be, aren’t remotely sufficient to the challenge of restoring the broadly shared prosperity that Americans enjoyed in the mid-20th century. That would require changing some laws to give stockholders and other corporate stakeholders the power to diminish the share of corporate revenue routinely claimed these days by top executives — at the expense of everyone else. It would require revitalizing unions. David Madland and Nick Bunker of the Center for American Progress recently found that in 1968, when 28 percent of the workforce was unionized, 53 percent of the nation’s income went to the middle class. In 2010, when 11.9 percent of the nation’s workers were unionized, the share claimed by the middle class had fallen to 46.5 percent.
Capitalism can create prosperity, but left unfettered it doesn’t create broadly shared prosperity — and never will. If belief and participation in democracy are sustained by people’s conviction that democracy produces good economic outcomes, then the growing concentration of wealth and income in the United States is a long-term threat to everything we profess to stand for. A nation where 93 percent of income growth goes to the top 1 percent is not a nation that will embark on great projects, or long command the allegiance of its people.
Harold Meyerson is editor-at-large of The American Prospect.



We have anti trust laws that prevent one business from dominating the market. We do not have any laws that prevent a handful of people from ending up with all the money. We all know what happens in a game of Monopoly when one person ends up with all the money.
We do not have anti trust laws for health insurance. Mainers in houses, apartments and trailers they can’t afford are on this site and at the state house defending tax cuts for the rich, and hating blue collar employees if they get a benefit package if they are Union. In the meantime if you are rich enough in Maine you don’t have to pay the same taxes as a taxi driver, can use tree growth as a tax dodge, and the tea party loves you.
Yes, and like all laws, the anti-trust prohibitions are practically useless without the willingness and the budgets necessary to enforce them. It seems we only see them at stake in cases in which one monopolist sues another.
Gordon Gecko would be proud of the way things are going. He said “greed is good”. He should have said “greed is great”.
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“greed is great”, and then…….get some bailout money when no one wants to buy your crap anymore because it’s too expensive!
yah……no one wants to play anymore.
Well, thats it!
Now that they have most of the money, control of the politicians and new cheap labor in China I guess their plan is to deny the US common man healthcare , give us all Aids, guns and stand your ground laws, and set us all free.
Then they will have the country all to there own.
The wingnut plan is working …… 93% and counting. You can trust they won’t be satisfied until they make the 93% …. 100% We all know how greedy they are, no surprises here.
Cutler, Sussman and King…all 1%’ers all liberal ( Democrats).
If all the mkilitias get really onto this and decide it isn’t the way for a free people to live, it could get interesting. Right now they’re more sympathetic to the 1%, but that may change over time.
Class war is alive and well and the 1% is winning.
The righties like to use the phrase ‘drinking the kool-aid’. The real kool-aid is the belief that voting republican will ever help average working Americans in any way. Union rights, tax breaks, TABOR laws, voter id’s etc……. It is all part of a well executed strategy by a handful of sociopathic plutocrats who will destroy our country if we can’t turn it around. God help us!
put the kool-aid down now.
Become a 1%er, its a lot more fun than whining about what you don’t have. My income increased 21.375% last year. You guys back in those tents yet?
The whole point of the story and the research and the paradigm shift in wealth and income distribution is that social mobility has largely become mythical in our country. The American dream is turning into a nightmare. The chances of an honest hard-working American to join the ranks of the 1% are declining towards the vanishing point. I’m happy for you that you are comfortable but speaking in larger terms, there comes a time when one persons “comfort” denies basic necessities to others.
BRHaaaaHaaaaaHaaaaHaaaa!!!!!!!
Yup, “I’ve got mine and could care less about anyone else.” Thanks so much for so clearly exemplifying the selfish corporate right wing mentality of the Republican Party which is ruining this nation and which would make Jesus Christ sick to his stomach. Good for you.
If your going to indict corporate right wing Republicans then you should be fair and indict corporate left wing Democrats. Both the Bush presidents have money, just like Clinton does. Obama will be rolling in the dough too. Talk to me about the Koch Brothers and I will talk to you about Ted Turner and Warren Sussman.
You are familiar with the ten commanments I would think? God said do not covet anything that is thy neighbors. I think gods message about the re-distribution rings loud and clear and the message is go get your own stuff and make your own money.
Yeah, that 4% unemployment rate and $1.75 gas really sucked when Bush was president! Perhaps if we keep voting for Dems, we can get to 15% unemployment and $10 gas!!
Perhaps when you realize that there will always be a top 1%, even in oligarchys and socialist countries, you will realize that they are not the answer.
Gas reached $4.19 in July, 2008. George W. Bush was President. In July ’08 the unemployment rate was 5.8. In October it was 6.5. In December 7.3. George Bush was President. In January 2009, Obama was unpacking at the White House and the unemployment rate was 7.8. In the last six months of Bush’s administration the unemployment rate went from 5.8 to 7.8 and everyone could see the train coming down the tracks.
The GOP has a very short memory…no its all Obama’s fault!
In November and December of 1982 the unemployment rate was 10.8. Ronald Reagan was President and had been for nearly two years. Remember?
Perfect examples are-
Fidel Castro- A billionaire in a communist country in which everyone is suppossed to be equal economically. Kim Jung Ill and his family, including his son, the new leader of North Korea, multi millionaires. And what about Hugo Chavez.
I wonder how much Chellie Pingree’s boyfriend Sussmans net worth went up. She is the champion of the 99% and he is a billionaire democrat campaign supporter. How about Ted Turner?
‘The consequences of this concentration of wealth and income extend beyond the purely economic. A middle class enduring prolonged stagnation isn’t likely to fund projects the nation needs to undertake — such as rebuilding our infrastructure or increasing teacher pay — or, ultimately, to retain its faith in the efficacy of democracy.”
“or, ultimately, retain its faith in the efficacy of democracy” Like they really care GREED GREED GREED I’m all set they say,,,,,,,, who cares about the lowly blue collars hahahahahah
well I wonder who’s going to do the dirty work now :-/
It’ll end up being money won’t be worth a damn .. Back to the Dark ages if it keeps up ?????
They will end all end up in assisted living with someone being paid minimum wage to take care of them.
We need to wake up. It isn’t class warfare to point out these huge issues.
The amount of money you have doesn’t determine how smart or hard you work — some industries simply compensate differently. We can’t be a nation that encourages this through our tax code. We can’t have a small handful with much and the vast vast majority with very little — that’s a banana republic.
So much for the Trickle Down Theory!
Sounds like Ryan’s plan isn’t working!!
A couple of quotes from two who lived and led in the good old days when the ultra-rich not only ran the whole show but bragged about it to boot!
“We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we cannot have both” – Justice Louis Brandeis.
“We stand for the rights of property, but we stand even more for the rights of man. We will protect the rights of the wealthy man, but we maintain that he holds his wealth subject to the general right of the community to regulate its business use as the public welfare requires” – Theodore Roosevelt.
Both men realized the need to check the power of private avarice and power to be of no less importance to civil society than the need to check the power of government. The constitution provides the means to do the latter, but in the case of the former the realm of civil and criminal law is all that is open to us, short of taking to the streets – something requiring a recklessness most of us do not possess. The problem gets stickier when the law is pretty much written and administered by the lackeys of those needing the checking, just as it was in TR’s day and the Harding-Coolidge years later on – and ours. Despite all the poo-pooing about the ineffectiveness and drift of the occupy movement, it may be the beginning of something much larger. Then again, it might be just a sneeze. The essential question is whether enough of us really agree with Brandeis and TR. I fear too few do and too many prefer the diversions of entertainment, permanent war, narcissism and bickering with each other – all of which get in the way of even thinking about it.
Bless you.
And the Republican controlled House (all one percenters I imagine) has sent a budget to the Senate that reduces Food Stamps and other safety net programs. Thanks for representing us folks.
Its unbelievable you people base your opinions on one study that was executed and written by one person in California with no oversight on how the study was conducted.
The numbers do not lie. Follow the money to see why America is in such a financial State that it is…. blaming the poor is such an old tired argument.
Didn’t blame anyone in my post. Simply made a statement. Putting words in my mouth. Predictable liberal response.
I did not say you blamed the poor… bad phrasing on my part…. I am tried of the argument that our country in in the financial shape it is in because of the poor… it is NOT welfare that has ruined this country, but greed…. so much greed that there is very little left for the 99%… when so few hold and control such a large percentage of the wealth, it seems ludicrous to be blaming poor people for the financial woes of this country…. I do not wish to livein a country that exists soley for the super rich to get richer… is that really why we have this union… to support the ultra rich with laws and exemptions , all the while blaming the poor for the financial shape of this country??
Yes you did acuse me of blaming the poor. Just read your post. I’m not a 1 percenter, nor am I a 99 percenter because I don’t own a tent. Can you get cable TV in a tent?
I said I am tried of the poor being blamed… I did not not mention you… there is a system wide attack on the poor over the last couple of years,a s if they are responsible for our woes and as a followup there are cuts to all the programs that help the poor, because they are crippling our economy, yet.. they are a drop in the bucket compared to the damage being done to our society by the rich…
can we keep to the issues and not personal attacks…
so .. who is being blamed for our financial woes?
I have been watching this trend for forty years, you? my opinion is based on decades of studies all saying the same thing. The U.S. is a capitalist plutocracy.
The Plutocracy goes for both sides of the isle. How do you explain the millions donated to the Democrat party and the Obama campaign in 08 by the unions, General Electric, Jeff Immelt, and George Soros, Just to mention a few.
Those who worked made more money? OMG that is just unfair. You should be paid based on how little you do!
Of course blame the poor. they can’t threaten you.
Why do we glorify poverty? Rather than raising people up why are we so focused on lowering the common denominator to where everyone is living to a poorer standard than before.
It’s hardly work if you have people investing for you. You just sit back and make money which is taxed as a lower rate than if you work two jobs to support your family and pay the doctor’s bill.
Like the family of Sam Walton work nearly as hard as the guy at the local lumber yard I THINK NOT.
No but their ancestor old Sam sure did and its not wrong to pass something on down to your descendants. I hope that when I pass on I can leave my child and any grandchildren she has something too.
Yes, it seems to be working very well in Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy. Dont tell anyone but my retirement accounts are up about 12% this year and I am making money in gold and silver. I also am an evil landlord that is making money by renting to people.
We are witnessing the most avaricious greed in the history of our great nation at work. This is destroying families, lives and hope. Since this trend started, families adjusted by sending mom to work. After another two decades, that isn’t enough to make ends meet. Millions of us are tired and working as hard as we can and just aren’t getting ahead.
The problem has been made worse by electing politicians who enact laws favoring the same few who have gotten all of the efficiency gains WE have earned for them through our labor. Now they possess so much money they can buy elections with spare change. We need to take our country back. It is not Mexicans or the Chinese we need to take it back from, it is the wealthy corporate owners who have systematically taken the whole pie for themselves.
You could look high and low and not find a more apt symbol of this greed than Mitt Romney. If this man is elected, he will continue the Bush policies before him. We all see where that got this country and yet we are contemplating electing someone with no material difference in his approach. This will not help the central problem working Americans face, we don’t get raises anymore because the rich at the top take it all. This is not said out of envy, because I would rather end my life than get ahead by starving others. Mine is the voice of a hard working, play by the rules guy who wants his kids to have a chance at success like my father and grandfather had.
Pravda on the Penobscot reprinting from Pravda on the Potomac again
Apparently Bill has not bothered to read a WAPO in the past thirty years.
The republicans are decent people they think people should help people not government. The problem is people are greedy . Most do not do thier part. Government waist so much . How could we fix this ? Maybe not have so many people be so gready. I hate to say it but compare to other western europeon countries thier is a social class system. No system is fair to everyone. The system we have now is not fair to 50% of the people . If it is about being fair to the majority. Then we should take form the top 1%
The wrong fixes for poverty have been proposed over and over again since the 1960’s. There is too much poverty in this country but in my opinion government is the problem not the solution.
David, rather than lower everyone to the lowest common demoninator wouldnt it make much more sense to raise people up. In my opinion taking money from one group to give it to another does too things, it lowers the standard of living for one person and shows another person that they dont have to be accountable for their own survivial.
Gee, there’s a shock.
Sounds like a Robin Hood story, take from the rich and give to the poor…