USuncutMN says: Tax the corporations! Tax the rich! Stop the cuts, fight for social justice for all. Standing in solidarity with http://www.usuncut.org/ and other Uncutters worldwide. FIGHT for a Foreclosure Moratorium! Foreclosure = homelessness. Resist the American Legislative Exchange Council, Grover Norquist and Citizen's United. #Austerity for the wheeler dealers, NOT the people.



We Are The 99% event

USuncutMN supports #occupyWallStreet, #occupyDC, the XL Pipeline resistance Yes, We, the People, are going to put democracy in all its forms up front and center. Open mic, diversity, nonviolent tactics .. Social media, economic democracy, repeal Citizen's United, single-payer healthcare, State Bank, Operation Feed the Homeless, anti-racism, homophobia, sexISM, war budgetting, lack of transparency, et al. Once we identify who we are and what we've lost, We can move forward.



Please sign and SHARE

Showing posts with label uber rich tax cuts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uber rich tax cuts. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Our Unrepresentative Representation

Our Unrepresentative Representation

Sunday, 18 December, 2011 08:28 Written by Dr. Art Kamm

Summary
The Occupy Wall Street movement has reason to protest.  Special interest-driven deregulation policy was at the heart of the recent economic collapse.  It has been the “99%” that has paid the price for this policy failure with lost employment, devalued housing prices, retirement accounts being cut in half, and increased levels of poverty while the wealthiest in America continued to do well.  A valid question is why our elected representatives are not working together to put a stop to failed policy that has been so damaging to the majority of Americans.  This article will examine the disproportionate number of the wealthy who hold elected office in Washington and the conflict of interest they face in setting policy versus their own financial interests as well as the special interests that finance their campaigns.  And it will explore an incentive that politicians have to stay in office where they can act on non-public information to their own financial benefit.  It examines the issue of whether our Congress has become ‘Our Unrepresentative Representation’.
Policy Was at the Heart of the Great Recession
Alan Greenspan, who presided over the Federal Reserve for 18 years before stepping down in 2006, was one of our nation’s leading voices for deregulation.  He was considered an economic sage whose words affected market direction and, as noted by Bob Woodward, was celebrated as the “Maestro” (ref).   Yet, it was a humbled Alan Greenspan who admitted before Congress in 2008 that his belief in deregulation had been shaken (ref).  ”Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself included, are in a state of shocked disbelief” he relayed to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.  Henry Waxman, chair of the committee, asked “Do you feel that your ideology pushed you to make decisions that you wish you had not made?”  Mr. Greenspan’s responded “Yes, I’ve found a flaw…I’ve been very distressed by that fact”.
When the Fed cut interest rates to near record lows from 2001 until mid-2004, housing prices climbed far faster than inflation or household income giving rise to concerns of a speculative bubble in both home prices and construction that would go bust; concerns that were ignored and calls for tighter regulation on subprime mortgages and other high risk mortgages were resisted.  Republican lawmakers tried to blame the mortgage meltdown on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac claiming that Democratic lawmakers blocked measures to reform the companies.  Greenspan disagreed placing far more blame on Wall Street companies that bundled subprime mortgages into pools and sold them as mortgage backed securities.  He stated that demand for these securities was so high that Wall Street companies pressured lenders to lower their standards and produce more “paper” (note the impact of repealing Glass-Steagall below).  Mr. Greenspan stated “The evidence strongly suggests that without the excess demand from securitizers, subprime mortgage originations (undeniably the source of the crisis) would have been far smaller and defaults accordingly far lower”.
A 2008 report published by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) agreed with Mr. Greenspan’s testimony.  The report concluded that the financial crisis originated from distortions and incentives created by policy actions and identified 2004 as being critical to causality (ref).
Quoting from that report:
“In 2004 four time specific factors came into play. (1) the Bush Administration ‘American Dream’ zero equity mortgage proposals became operative, helping low-income families to obtain mortgages; (2) the then regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO), imposed greater capital requirements and balance sheet controls on those two government- sponsored mortgage securitisation monoliths, opening the way for banks to move in on their “patch” with plenty of low income mortgages coming on stream; (3) the Basel II accord on international bank regulation was published and opened an arbitrage opportunity for banks that caused them to accelerate off-balance-sheet activity; and (4) the SEC agreed to allow investment banks (IB’s) voluntarily to benefit from regulation changes to manage their risk using capital calculations under the ‘consolidated supervised entities program’. (Prior to 2004 broker dealers were supervised by stringent rules allowing a 15:1 debt to net equity ratio. Under the new scheme investment banks could agree voluntarily to SEC consolidated oversight (not just broker dealer activities), but with less stringent rules that allowed them to increase their leverage ratio towards 40:1 in some cases.) The combination of these four changes in 2004 caused the banks to accelerate off-balance sheet mortgage securitisation as a key avenue to drive the revenue and the share price of banks….
“When OFHEO imposed greater capital requirements and balance sheet controls on Fannie and Freddie, banks that had been selling mortgages to them faced revenue gaps and an interruption to their earnings. Their solution was to create their own Fannie and Freddie look-alikes: the structured investment vehicles (SIVs) and collateralised debt obligation (CDOs). The influence of the controls affecting Federal Mortgage Pools and the corresponding response in private label RMBS is shown in Figure 2 [see report]. This new surge of RMBS caused by the Fannie- Freddie regulator was picked up much too late by Bank regulators to take effective action. ”
In the context of the above it is important to note some other deregulation (also, failure to regulate) policy decisions.  The banking industry had been seeking repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act since at least the 1980′s and it occurred in 1999 (ref).  Glass-Steagall was legislation that was put into place following the Great Depression that, amongst other things, separated commercial from investment banking to remove the conflict of interest inherent to an institution controlling both a commercial bank and an investment bank (note Greenspan’s testimony that investment banks were pressuring commercial lenders to issue more “paper”, i.e. risky mortgages, because of the high demand for mortgage-backed derivatives).  Also, there was CFTC’s failed attempt at regulating and bringing transparency to OTC derivatives in the late 1990′s thus allowing the market for those financial instruments to grow unregulated for the next ten years (ref).  These instruments, backed by risky assets, were at the heart of such dramatic failures as Bear Sterns and AIG.  And there was tax policy that contributed to pushing more income and wealth into a small sliver of our population when our economy is 70% personal consumption.


Reference for above figure (ref)
In both instances where 1% of our population held up to 24% of this nation’s income (prior to the Great Depression and Great Recession) our country experienced a severe economic downturn (ref).
Above figure from Krugman (ref).
And who paid the price for these failed policies?  It was those in what has been called the “99%” by the Occupy Wall Street movement.  Their purchasing power not keep pace with the growth of the economy.

Their homes losing value (most often the middle class’s key investment).  Their retirement accounts being cut in half.  And jobs disappearing as corporations cut back on expense to maintain profitability.  And this pain is being experienced while the richest of Americans quintupled their income during the heart of the Great Recession (ref) and millionaire households (the “1%”) hold a sum of wealth equivalent to almost three times the size of our national economy that is anticipated to double within the next decade as money makes money at historically low tax rates (ref).  And income from that wealth (dividends and capital gains) is not subject to payroll tax that supports programs that the rest of America depends on during their senior years (Social Security and Medicare).
And yet the drumbeat of deregulation and tax policy largely benefitting the wealthiest continues.  We continue to hear that it is not smart to tax our ‘job creators’; yet job creation in large part was anemic during 4 year periods where ‘trickle down’ policy was in place (ref).

* Total Non-Farm Payroll expressed in millions
The money we borrowed to support the tax benefit to the wealthiest (the debt being assumed by America’s taxpayers and future generations) went to support both ‘Wall Street’ and high growth business interests abroad (ref).  We continue to hear that regulation is stifling business, and yet it was deregulation of the financial industry that was at the heart of the financial crisis as noted by both Mr. Greenspan’s testimony as well as the OECD report (see above).  We continue to hear about privatizing Social Security; this after we have witnessed the level corporate risk taking that lead to the financial crisis Mr. Greenspan said left him in ‘shocked disbelief’.  And with an estimated 45,000 Americans dying each year (ref) (including over 2000 military veterans) due to a lack of access to essential care, those who are denied coverage are required to pay tax to support the healthcare benefits of our elected officials, the same officials who are accepting large sums of money from special interests opposed to universal coverage.
And there is question about the emotion underlying the Occupy Wall Street movement?
With these failed policies having caused so much pain for much of America, a fair question is why our elected representatives are not working together in putting a stop to this. They are after all our elected representation.  It is difficult to dismiss that many our elected officials face a conflict of interest regarding their charge to represent ‘the people’ versus their own financial self-interests as well as the special interests that carry them to office. This article will examine the disproportionate number of the wealthy who hold elected office in Washington and the conflict of interest they face in setting policy versus their own financial interests as well as the special interests that finance their campaigns.  And it will explore an incentive the wealthy have had for staying in office where they can act on non-public information to their own financial benefit.  It will explore whether our Congress has become our ‘unrepresentative representation’.

Unrepresentative Representation

Disproportionate Wealth
The Senate has been called a millionaires club (ref) with about half of its members holding that status.  In 2009 244 members of Congress were millionaires – 138 Republicans and 106 Democrats (ref).   However, a picture is worth a thousand words.  The following graphics were sent to me by one of my readers:


A significant imbalance exists (around 40- to 50-fold) regarding the number of millionaires holding elected office in Washington versus the general public.  The median American family had a net worth of $96,000 in 2009 per the Federal Reserve Board while the median net worth for members of the US House of Representatives and Senate was $725,000 and $2.4 million, respectively (ref).  The reference provides a list of the 20 wealthiest members of Congress based on 2009 reports, 10 Republican and 10 Democrats, with Representative Darrell Issa (R-California) holding the top spot with an average net worth of over $300 million dollars.

Special Interest Contributions
There is a high correlation between candidate spending and winning elected office (ref).  In the 2010, candidate spending correlated to success in 85% of House races and 83% of Senate races.  And historically the correlation has even been greater; in 2004; 98% of House seats and 88% of Senate seats went to the candidates who spent the most.  Why does this correlation exist?  Because candidate exposure is expensive.  Elections are won by the expensive tactic of manipulating high probability voters through repeated messaging over TV during prime time hours (information obtained from a political consulting group during my exploration of a Senate run).  The average cost of winning a Senate seat was $8.28 million in 2010 and $1.09 million for a House seat (ref).
Most self-financing candidates faltered in the 2010 cycle and significant investments from outside groups helped to elect more than 200 federal candidates.  ”In two-thirds of races where outside groups spent at least some money on advertisements and other political communications, the dollars spent supporting the winner, coupled with amounts spent opposing the loser, exceeded dollars spent supporting the loser or attacking the winner..” (ref).
As a candidate can not raise near enough within their own district to support an election effort, the vast majority of campaign contributions come from outside sources.  What follows for Representative Issa’s campaign contributions (Jan 2005 – Dec 2007) holds true for most elected officials.  Only 5% of his contributions came from within his district; 54% ($674,370) came from outside his state and 94% ($1,173,693) came from outside his district (ref).  The largest sum of out-of-state contributions came from the Washington DC area where special interest lobbying groups operate.

Conflicting Interests
Personal Wealth vs Tax Policy
Regarding the disproportionate number of the wealthy holding elected office, consider tax policy, especially capital gains and dividends.  Capital gains in the 1970′s were taxed at 35% (ref) and have since been lowered to the current 15% rate (ref).  Capital gains and dividends comprise a disproportionate amount of the income for the wealthy and, as Warren Buffet has noted, is responsible for the lower net income tax paid by the wealthiest (ref).  Additionally, this income is not subject to payroll tax that supports Social Security and Medicare, programs that much of America depends on in their later years.  The president’s plan to raise taxes may include a change in how capital gains are taxed (ref).   Consider that the richest 0.1% of Americans pay 44 percent of all capital gains taxes and the richest 1% pay 68% of that tax.  The bottom 80% of Americans account for less than 3% of all capital gains taxes paid.  About 40% of members of the US House of Representatives and nearly half of all US senators reported capital gains in 2009 (ref).  Many of the GOP presidential candidates have suggested eliminating the capital gains tax all together (ref).  Increasing the tax rate on capital gains, which largely affects the wealthiest and which would help reduce the federal deficit, would directly affect 176 members of the House and 48 US senators (ref).  I submit that many in our Congress face a conflict of interest between their own financial self-interests versus policy that could help reduce our federal deficits to the benefit of our future generations.
Campaign Financing vs Representation
The conflict that exists for politicians whose campaigns are financed largely by money raised outside their districts is apparent and expressed in their behavior.  A few examples are provided below.
During the healthcare reform debate it was found that more that a dozen lawmakers placed comments into the Congressional record that were ghostwritten, in whole or in part, by lobbyists working for Genentech (ref).  This was caught because the remarks made by multiple lawmakers lined up word for word.  Genentech’s PAC had made financial contributions to many House members including some who filed statements into the Congressional Record.  Although the head of Genentech’s Washington office claimed that “there was no connection between the contributions and the statements”, company employees had been among the hosts at fund-raisers for some of those lawmakers.  Additionally there is the example of senator Joe Lieberman’s behavior during that debate.  Consider his position of opposing a public option after he had reportedly accepted $427,644 from insurance companies since 2005 including at the time a recently received sum of $65,200 from Aetna and its employees (ref), this after tax payer money supports his own healthcare benefits.
Consider the attempts to raise taxes on the wealthiest of Americans to help reduce deficits.  A recent poll (ref) showed nearly three-quarters of Americans (including two-thirds of Republicans) favoring such a measure as well as the evidence that when such policy was in place in the 1990′s our country had a strong economy and was paying down its debt.  So a reasonable question is how does 100% of the Republican elected representation in the senate oppose a tax increase when up to two-thirds of their party constituents agree with an increase.  Consider that behavior in light of a substantial level of funding for Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS reportedly coming from a small circle of extremely wealthy Wall Street hedge fund and private equity moguls “bitterly opposed to a proposal by congressional Democrats – and endorsed by the Obama administration – to increase the tax rates on compensation that hedge funds pay their partners” (ref).  These hedge fund moguls and other wealthy donors contributed tens of millions of dollars (to protect their interests) that helped to secure big GOP victories in the 2010 midterm elections.
Consider CFTC’s Brooksley Born’s failed attempt to regulate and bring transparency to OTC derivatives in the late 1990′s (ref).  These are the financial instruments that were at the heart of dramatic corporate and fund failures that sparked the market collapse at the start of the Great Recession.  In 1998, ten years before the economic crisis, a hedge fund (Long Term Capital Management, LTCM) was near collapse and had used these instruments to leverage $5 billion into more than $1 Trillion while doing business with 15 of Wall Streets largest financial institutions.  At that time the President’s working group was informed that the entire American economy hung in the balance and the Fed intervened to avert the crisis.  Although the attempt to regulate was portrayed as a battle of ideologies between Born (Keynesian) and Greenspan/Rubin (Austrian and neoconservative laissez faire), Wall Street lobbying efforts proved to be powerful.  ”Under heavy pressure from the financial lobby, legislation prohibiting regulation of derivatives by Born’s agency was passed by the Congress”.  This paved the way for ten years of unregulated growth of a market that was highly profitable to Wall Street and ultimately harmful to much of America.

Incentives (Insider Trading)
As reported by 60 Minutes (ref) “members of Congress and their aides have regular access to powerful political intelligence, and many have made well-timed stock market trades in the very industries they regulate”.  Essentially, there is no law prohibiting Congress from ‘Insider Trading’, something that is a criminal offense for corporate insiders.  Consider, for example, the closed door meetings between Congressional leaders and Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Fed Chairman Bernanke where lawmakers were being warned that a global financial meltdown could occur within a few days.  These meetings were so secretive that cell phones and Blackberries were confiscated beforehand to prevent leaks.  Literally the day following one such meeting, Alabama representative Spencer Bachus (who was at the time the ranking Republican member on the House Financial Services Committee and now its Chairman), bought option funds that would go up in value if the market went down.  So although publicly he took the position of trying to keep the economy from cratering, he was privately betting that it would.  Consider that it was Congress that enacted financial deregulation policy, and a ranking committee member who supported such policy could act on insider information to profit from its failure while much of America suffered the consequences of its failure.
Before retiring, Congressman Brian Baird (Washington) spent six unsuccessful years trying to get his colleagues to to prohibit insider trading in Congress and establish rules governing conflicts of interests.  Despite outcries from the offices of Democratic Congresswoman Pelosi and Republican Speaker Boehner following the airing of the 60 Minutes report (both were questioned publicly by Steve Kroft about their involvement in the practice), at least 93 members of Congress have signed on as cosponsors of the Stock Act and for the first time the bill has been introduced in the Senate.

Discussion
Republic, Lost
Harvard law professor, Lawrence Lessig, is author of “Republic, Lost: How Money Corrupts Congress – And a Plan to Stop It”.  A point he made in interview (ref) is that the OWS movement has it wrong when it refers to the 99%.  Lessig points out that only 0.05% of America max out Congressional campaign contributions, and only 0.26% give more than $200.  As money provides access to government, it is not OWS’s 99%, but rather the 99.95% that is denied access.  He points out that as 30 – 70% of a politician’s time is spent in fundraising, they become dependent on the funders rather than the people (and it is only worse now as the Citizen’s United ruling gives corporations the rights of a person).  Politicians are therefore responding to a small sliver of our society.  And he notes that politicians also extort business for financial gain by demanding corporate participation in campaign fundraising to get what it wants.
In a separate interview (ref) Dr. Lessig makes the point that in 1980 98% of financial assets traded in our economy were subject to the normal rules of transparency, anti-fraud requirements, and basic exchange-based rules of the New Deal.  By 2008, 90% of traded assets were traded invisibly because they were not subject to such obligations.  But what concerns him is what happened after 2008.  After “every independent analyst had said there was a link between the structure of deregulation and the collapse (and he mentions Greenspan’s Congressional testimony),…Wall Street was able to blackmail the Democrats and the Republicans into handing them essentially a ‘Get Out of Jail Free’ card and effect no fundamental change in the architecture of our financial system”.

The Real Cost of Poverty: Lost American Lives
But the real cost of this special interest-driven policy failure is in the staggering number of American lives it has claimed.  The latest census shows that 1 in 2 Americans have fallen into poverty or are scraping by on earnings that classify them as low income (ref).  ”The new numbers follow years of stagnating wages for the middle class that have hurt millions of workers and families”.  However, what is not discussed is that one of the consequences of poverty is that it claims lives.
As I wrote in a previous article on income/wealth inequality as a moral crisis for this country (ref), a study conducted by Columbia University’s School of Public Health estimated that in 2000 875,000 deaths could be attributed to a cluster of social factors bound up with poverty and income inequality (ref).  The Great Recession has caused an increase in poverty and applying the 2000 mortality rate in the Columbia University report to the number of Americans currently living in poverty an estimated 1,228,169 Americans died in 2009 from the effects of poverty and income inequality (ref).



This estimated annual increase of more than 350,000 lost American lives due to poverty since 2000 (of which failed policy has contributed) dwarfs the total 4484 US military fatalities incurred over the entire course of the Iraq War (ref).  This staggering loss of American lives due to the consequences of poverty is never part of the political dialog and our news sanitizes the picture of poverty in our country.

Consider that Congress just reached a deal that would prevent yet another threatened government shutdown by including a cut of $3.5 billion for low-income heating and utility subsidies (a cut of about 25%) while maintaining the Bush era tax cuts largely favoring the wealthiest.  In striking such a deal, our Congress has placed a higher value on special interest-driven policy than the lives of American citizens – and that does represent a moral crisis for our country.

Beware this Boy
A Christmas Carol is one of my favorite seasonal stories.


In writing the above this holiday season I was reminded of Scrooge saying that if the poor are to die then “they had better do it and decrease the surplus population”.  I could hear the voice of the Marley’s ghost screaming at Scrooge that “Mankind was my business”.  I could see the Ghost of Christmas Present revealing the two wretched children to Scrooge, the girl being ‘Want’, the boy being ‘Ignorance’ and saying to Scrooge: “Beware them both, and all of their degree, but most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom, unless the writing be erased.”

Really not a bad time of year to reflect on what has happened to our Congress.  We must erase the writing on the brow of ignorance.   We must not allow our Congress to remain Our Unrepresentative Representation.

http://www.artonissues.com/2011/12/our-unrepresentative-representation/

Monday, August 22, 2011

Wealth and Income Inequality: America’s Moral Crisis

Less than one tenth of one percent of our population is holding a sum of wealth approaching three times the size of the US economy that is anticipated to more than double within the next decade, the earnings on which does not contribute to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.  And the wealthiest in America quintupled their income during the heart of the Great Recession.  To propose cuts to food stamps and unemployment benefits for the victims of the Great Recession during a time of increasing poverty and poverty-related deaths, without shared sacrifice at the top, represents nothing less than a moral crisis for our country.

Since 2009 there has been no attempt to raise taxes on 98-99% of America; in fact, tax breaks have been issued to Middle America (ref).  The battle regarding increasing revenue has been about closing tax loopholes and reinstating progressive tax rates on the wealthiest of Americans, generally the top 1% of income earners, the only class that has done well, and quite well, during this economic downturn.  That is where the debate lies.  That is where the GOP is digging in its heals.

Warren Buffet, the second wealthiest individual in America behind Bill Gates (ref), has advocated over the past several years to raise taxes on the wealthiest of Americans.  Using himself as an example, he paid 17.4% on his taxable income last year (around $40 million), a lower level than any of the other 20 individuals in his office (range 33% to 41%, average 36%).  The reason for this is that the “mega-rich pay income taxes at a rate of 15 percent on most of the earnings but pay practically nothing in payroll taxes.  It’s a different story for the middle class; typically they fall into the 15% and 25% income brackets, and then are hit with heavy payroll taxes to boot” (ref).

It didn’t used to be like that.  In 1976-77 capital gains rates were 39.9%; today they are just 15%.  The tax rate on the highest levels of income following WWII during Eisenhower (90%), then Kennedy (70%) until Reagan where it was reduced to 28%, now stands at 35% following the G.W. Bush tax cuts.  And these unfunded tax cuts, heavily weighted to the wealthy, have contributed to a growing income and wealth inequality (ref) as well as consistently increasing our national debt at a rate faster than the growth of our economy.
As more income has been pushed to the top over the past 30 years, the income growth of the middle class, and thus its purchasing power, has not kept pace with the growth of the economy.  Quintile by quintile, the lower 80 percent of America is down almost $10,000/yr in income distribution since 1979 while the upper 1% is up over $740,000 in average income during that same timeframe.  And with an economy that is 70% personal consumption, this has resulted in weaker demand for goods and services and thus slow recovery and higher unemployment (ref).


But graphs and charts do a disservice in showing what is really happening with wealth and income inequality in America. The actual dollar increases in income and wealth in recent years within the top 0.1% of income earners, as well as the rapidly growing sums of money held within that group, are mind-staggering; perhaps obscene is a better word during these economically troubled times.  And that will be thrust of this article.  It will compare and contrast increases in wealth and income at the top versus the extent and effects of growing poverty (including death) and unemployment in the rest of America.  The failure to share sacrifice at the top while pursuing cuts in programs benefitting the victims of the recession, represents nothing less than a moral crisis for our country.

Millionaire households, that represent less than a tenth of a percent (0.076%) of the US population, hold $38.6 Trillion in wealth that is anticipated to increase 225% within the next decade to $87.1 Trillion (ref)

And those figures may actually be underestimated due to holdings in off-shore tax havens (ref).  How much money is $38.6 Trillion?  Less than one tenth of one percent of our population is holding wealth that is approaching three times the size of the entire US economy (GDP).  It is almost three times as great as our Gross National Debt.  And it is income producing and builds upon itself.  Consider that almost half (49.7%) of investment assets (financial securities, stocks, mutual funds, etc) are held within the top 1% of income earners (ref).  The capital gains and dividends produced by these investment assets are taxed at only 15% and are not subject to payroll taxes that contribute to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.  With ‘money making money’ at historically low tax rates, the wealth of millionaire households is anticipated to reach $87.1 Trillion within the next decade.

While refusing to let the unfunded Bush era tax cuts for the wealthiest expire or close tax loopholes, a Republican House proposal would cut funding for the food stamp program as part of its austerity measures.  The total cost of this program last year was $65 billion (just 0.17% of the wealth held by millionaire households) and helped feed 45 million needy Americans (ref).

Since the Great Recession there has been a marked increase in Food Stamp participation.  Currently 45.8 million people rely on them and that is anticipated to increase by an additional 22.5 million individuals bringing the total to over 68 million needy citizens.

 

This reliance on food stamps parallels the escalation in poverty (ref).  The most current census estimates have 43.6 million Americans, 14.3% of our population, living in poverty in 2009.  However, a recent study by the National Academy of Science places the figure at almost 53 million.  Using the census figures, 15.5 million of these individuals were children (1 child out of every 5).  The poverty rate amongst children increased 28% since 2000, and jumped 10% from 2008-2009 during the heart of the Great Recession.  Every day in America 2,573 babies are born into poverty (ref).
 

Columbia University’s School of Public Health conducted an examination of mortality and medical data and estimated that in 2000 875,000 deaths could be attributed to a cluster of social factors bound up with poverty and income inequality (ref).  Applying that rate to the current number of Americans living in poverty an estimated 1,228,169 Americans died in 2009 from the effects of poverty and income inequality (ref).

Who uses the food stamp program?  About half the recipients are children, 8% are the elderly, 41% have incomes half the poverty level or less, and 18% have no income at all.  The average family using food stamps has only $101 in savings or valuables (ref).  The growing number of these individuals represent the victims of the recession.  I submit that cutting benefits to the impoverished, the hungry, during economically difficult times while retaining historically low tax rates for the wealthiest, is morally corrupt and a statement of values that we as Americans should not tolerate.

The highest earners in America (74 of them with $50+ million in income) quintupled their pay in 2009, averaging $518.8 million in income ($10 million/week), and made as much income as the lowest paid 19 million workers in America combined (ref) (ref) (ref)

While 68 million Americans are relying on food stamps to feed themselves, and with wages declining for 90% of America, those earning the highest incomes in our country increased their income 5-fold during the heart of the Great Recession.  These 74 individuals alone made more money than the lowest paid 19 million American workers combined.

Both Eric Cantor (ref) and Michelle Bachmann (ref) have stated that they do not support extending unemployment benefits for those who find themselves out of work as a result of the economic downturn.  Ms. Bachmann’s position is that “We don’t have the money”.

There has been a marked increase in unemployment following the Great Recession as noted in the following graph (ref). The U3 is the official monthly headline number.  The U6 is the Bureau of Labor Statistics broadest unemployment measure including short-term discouraged, other marginally-attached workers, and those forced to work part time because of lack of full-time employment.  The SGS Alternative (ref) is an aggregate of U3 and U6 and additonally includes long-term discouraged workers ‘who are unemployed and want to work, but have not looked for work within the past year’.  These individuals were excluded from the official count in the 1990′s.  The SGS gives an unemployment rate of 22.5%, an all time record of 34 million people currently in need of work.


Without unemployment benefits, more individuals, including children, would be driven into poverty and its consequences including an increase in poverty-related deaths.  For Ms. Bachmann to state that “We don’t have the money” to extend unemployment benefits while supporting historically low tax rates benefitting the wealthiest is unconscionable.  To let unemployment benefits expire for the victims of this recession would be placing a higher value on tax benefits for the wealthiest over the lives of US citizens, both adults and children.  And regrettably this is not the first time I have made this argument regarding policy decisions on the Right (ref).

Retaining Tax Benefits for the Wealthiest While Cutting Safety Nets: A Few Other Statistics (ref)
  • The richest 400 Americans hold more wealth than 154 million Americans, half the US population.  They paid 30% of their income in taxes in 1995, but only 18% now.
  • The average millionaire saves $136,000/year due to reduced taxes, a sum greater than the highest income level in the lower 80% of America (and, by definition, there are no taxes paid on those savings).
  • One percent of America holds 40% of this country’s wealth, more than the lower 90% of America combined, and holds almost half of all investment assets that produce income at lower tax rates without payroll taxes that contribute to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
  • Between 1975-2010, income of the top 0.1% of income earners quadrupled and for the top 0.01% quintupled.  During this same time period worker productivity increased 80%, and yet the income shift has resulted in a shortfall of $400/week for the typical American family.
  • From 2009 – Q4 2010, 88% of income growth went to corporate profits (i.e. CEOs) while just 1% went to workers.
Discussion
For those who choose to construe the above as an ‘attack on the rich’, I write from the perspective of having been there.  As I explained in an open letter to Senator McConnell and Congressman Boehner when they threatened to let benefits to the vulnerable expire unless tax cuts for the wealthiest were extended (ref), my views are shaped from having lived during my adult life at income levels that define poverty, the middle class and the wealthy.  I’ve never forgotten that surprise EITC check in the mail during a particularly lean year living on one income ($4500/yr and a student loan with child having medical needs and no insurance).  It meant alot and I never forgot that helping hand our government extended to me as I later went on to provide employment to others. I had no problem what-so-ever during the Clinton surtax years in paying that additional 3.6% on upper income (wow, that was a real back breaker) into the system to keep it well; the same system that lent a helping hand to me when I needed it and the same system that later allowed me to do well. It is a sense of obligation.  And it is worth noting that the redistribution  during the Clinton years contributed to 7 million fewer Americans living in poverty (ref).

The unfunded tax cuts did not stimulate economic growth, employment, or capital investment in America as was promised (ref) (ref).  And the current tax system is, frankly, grossly unfair to the middle class and damaging to our economy. When the wealthiest in our nation proportionately pay a smaller share of their total income in taxes than the middle class (this includes 1470 individuals who earned $1 million or more in 2009 and yet paid no taxes, ref) and when the tax system helps income and wealth accumulate at the top at the expense of our economic engine, the middle class (ref) Mr. Buffett is right when he said in 2006: “There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning” (ref).

But the real consequences of what is going on in America today is being sanitized; we’re not seeing the face of poverty on TV with well dressed and well fed commentators and guests debating the issue.  This is not dissimilar to the coverage of the Iraq War by mainstream media.  As was detailed in the documentary, Independent Intervention, what we saw in our living rooms were the bomb explosions of Shock and Awe, not the consequences of those explosions on women and children as was graphically shown in the documentary; something the filmmakers claim would have affected public opinion on that war.  And rarely do we hear about the racial component of the inequality where the March unemployment rate (seasonally adjusted) was 7.9%, 15.5%, and 11.3% for American whites, blacks and hispanics, respectively (ref).


There are real life consequences to poverty and there is no denying that one of the consequences is that it claims lives. And when cuts to safety nets are being threatened for the victims of this Great Recession while historically low tax rates are being maintained for the wealthiest, a higher value is being placed on those tax benefits than human life itself.

I submit that this represents a moral crisis for our country.  Representative Bachmann and others may claim that we do not have the money to pay for those unemployment benefits, but they should first increase revenue by reducing the gap between what the wealthy and middle class proportionately pay into the system.  Yes, Ms. Bachmann, it is good that people get to keep their money, but the rich are proportionately getting to keep more of theirs than the middle class.

Why is this happening?  It is difficult to deny that part of it is that our politicians now are beholden to a different ‘person’ than the general public to retain their job.  It is a person in the form of corporations and special interests that can contribute unlimited sums to political campaigns and sway public opinion through expensive media blitzes (ref).

In 2009, Texas Governor Rick Perry described the expansion of unemployment benefits under the stimulus plan to thousands of low-wage workers as burdening tax payers with “higher taxes and expanded obligations” (ref), and his Texas tax laws actually “redistribute income away from ordinary families and towards the richest Texans” (ref).  Regarding his recent Christian Prayer event in Houston that was billed as an attempt to reverse America’s national decline (ref), I wonder if Proverbs 22:16 was included in the prayer list: “He who oppresses the poor to increase his wealth and he who gives gifts to the rich – both come to poverty”.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Bachmann Makes Her Move

Bachmann Makes Her Move

Aug 15, 2011 | By Jeff Spross
GOP presidential contender Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) won the Republican straw poll in Ames, Iowa on Saturday with 4,823 votes; more than twice that of any other candidate save Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), whom she beat by just under 200 votes. However, neither former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, nor current Texas Gov. Rick Perry — who announced his candidacy for the nomination the same day — made any serious commitment of time or resources to the poll (though Perry supporters were in evidence on the ground in Ames). It’s not clear how much, if anything, the poll actually reveals about Bachmann’s political odds. Still, the event was decisive enough to drive third place finisher and former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty from the race, and served as a symbolic capstone to Bachmann’s dramatic rise through the GOP ranks.
As Ryan Lizza summed up in his recent New Yorker profile, “Bachmann belongs to a generation of Christian conservatives whose views have been shaped by institutions, tracts, and leaders not commonly known to secular Americans, or even to most Christians. Her campaign is going to be a conversation about a set of beliefs more extreme than those of any politician of her stature.” But while her political career originated and remains steeped in culture war politics, this has not prevented her from staking out an exceptionally hard-line on economic issues: She came out against the plan put forward by House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) to end the debt ceiling stand-off, advocated blanket opposition to an increase in the debt ceiling under any circumstances, and has called for making more than a $1 TRILLION in cuts in just one year to balance the budget immediately, to take just the most recent examples.
BACHMANN’S INFLUENCES: Among Bachmann’s influences is a series of evangelical films by Francis Schaeffer titled How Should We Then Live?, which she has cited on the campaign trail as a profound influence, and a biography of Confederate General Robert E. Lee by author J. Steven Wilkins, which was listed as a recommended read on Bachmann’s personal website for a number of years. Schaeffer, whom Bachmann praised as “a tremendous philosopher” to Lizza, is striking for his hard-line right-wing evangelical stances on everything from politics to philosophy to art. His film series condemned the Italian Renaissance, the Enlightenment, Darwin, secular humanism, and postmodernism as morally corrosive and oppositional to a God-centered worldview, while asserting the inerrancy of the Bible and the moral imperative of a biblical worldview. According to Lizza’s interview with Schaefer’s son Frank, the Roe v. Wade decision held particular prominence in his father’s thinking, marking a critical turn in America towards moral degeneracy. Still, all of this is small potatoes compared to J. Steven Wilkins book Call of Duty: The Sterling Nobility of Robert E. Lee, which describes slavery as an institution fostering “mutual respect” between black slaves and the white South, and one that left slaves “immeasurably better off” than they were in Africa. Wilkins goes on to argue against abolitionism, saying time was needed for the “sanctifying effects of Christianity” to take hold — presumably through slavery’s institutional causeways — before emancipation would be appropriate. Lizza correctly described the book as “objectively pro-slavery” and called Bachmann’s recommendation of the tome “one of the most startling things I learned about her.” The book’s bizarre moral inversion has carried over into other areas of Bachmann’s political activity, when in one instance she signed onto a marriage pledge by the FAMiLY LEADER that included language suggesting African-American children were better off under two-parent households during slavery than they are under one-parent households in modern America.
SOCIAL EXTREMISM: Bachmann’s commitment to the goals of the far right on social issues has not wavered as she has climbed the political ladder. Her early success in conflating educational activism with right-wing culture war issues was helped along by a now-disbanded group called EdWatch, which promoted everything from the teaching of creationism, to climate change denial, to opposition to gay rights and equality. Considered its “prized pupil,” EdWatch provided Bachmann with critical support in both her 2000 run for the Minnesota state Senate and her 2006 run for Congress. She retains the group’s two founders as staff members, and actively campaigns against the “homosexual agenda” in public schools. In 2004, Bachmann voiced concerns that the arrival of gay marriage in Massachusetts would lead Minnesotan couples to marry there, return to the state, and then “group marriage, polygamy, and things much worse may not be far behind.” Bachmann has both endorsed and received the endorsement of pastors who have advocated “ex-gay” therapy, called homosexuality immoral and unnatural, and dismissed recent concerns over the effects of anti-gay bullying in schools. The pledge by the FAMiLY LEADER which Bachmann signed included assertions that homosexuality was both a chosen lifestyle and a health risk, and Bachmann herself recently stated that the military’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy “worked very well,” and if president, she would “probably” reinstate it. Finally, her husband Marcus Bachmann runs a clinic providing “ex-gay” reparative therapy — which runs counter to the American Psychological Association’s conclusions concerning the appropriate therapeutic response to sexual orientation. To hear Bachmann tell it, she is “very proud” of the clinics, despite repeatedly dodging more pointed questions about the issue, particularly after scrutiny turned to her husband for referring to gays as “barbarians” and for taking over $137,000 in Medicaid funds over the past five years. In fact, the resulting scrutiny has become sufficiently intense that Marcus Bachmann has been forced to backtrack, claiming his clinic has never been involved with reparative therapy and suggesting the “barbarians” incident was the result of an interview doctored to embarrass the campaign.
ECONOMIC PRIORITIES REWARD THE WEALTHY: Bachmann’s economic views are no less striking for being relatively new-formed and often incoherent. She ended the recent debate over the debt ceiling increase with a move to the most extreme position possible, namely blanket opposition to any increase under any circumstances. When reminded that reaching America’s borrowing limit while preserving all payments to Social Security, Medicare, the military, and America’s creditors — as Bachmann has insisted — would mathematically require gargantuan and immediate cuts to every other area of government, Bachmann has responded with platitudes and obfuscation. When Fox News’ own Chris Wallace recently pressed Bachmann on this same point, she insisted that the budget gap be closed with “pro-growth policies” to increase revenue without altering the tax system — nevermind that a growth in revenue necessary to close the deficit, even if possible, would require time, and thus borrowing would have to continue in the interim if massive cuts are to be avoided. As for those pro-growth policies, they seem to consist of lowering the corporate tax rate from 35 to 9 percent and eliminating the capital gains tax entirely, all at a cost to the federal budget of multiple trillions in revenue over 10 years. And all while calling for an increase in taxes on the working poor. Last year, Bachmann decried President Obama’s payroll tax cut for people lower down the economic ladder as an unaffordable increase in the deficit while simultaneously defending the need and legitimacy of much greater tax cuts for the rich regardless of their budgetary effect — all within the same interview, no less. And she has bizarrely claimed an extension of unemployment benefits, at a cost of only $34 billion for six months, would be unaffordable, even as she advocates tax policies that would decimate the government’s revenue stream. As for the recent downgrade of the United States credit rating by Standard & Poor’s, Bachmann laid claim to the downgrade as a validation of her position in the debt ceiling debate, while directly denying and contradicting the analysis Standard & Poor’s offered to explain the downgrade — and analysis whose cited reasons included the Republicans’ intransigent refusal to raise tax revenue, as well as the rhetoric offered by some, including Bachmann herself, suggesting the consequences of not raising the debt ceiling would not be particularly severe. Whether Bachmann is simply being disingenuous and politically opportunistic, or if she actually believes lightening the tax burden on the rich while increasing it for the poor is defensible on moral and policy grounds, or if she genuinely does not understand the economic consequences of her stated positions, or if she simply assumes anything advocated by Republicans is by definition good for the country while anything advocated by President Obama is by definition destructive, remains unclear.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Some favorite 'source material' to combat common misinformation

Some favorite 'source material' to combat common misinformation



Bush tax cuts & spending is largely responsible for our debt today:http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo​.com/2011/05/chart-bush-polici


  






And it was 10 years ago that the big borrowing started to pay for the Bush tax cuts.  Folks were warned about the effect on the economy:  warnings that have come true today: http://thinkprogress.org/speci​al/2011/07/20/273795/ten-years​-ago-bush-tax-cuts/  





Cost comparisions of Bush & Obama policies (who cost the most): http://www.nytimes.com/imagepa​ges/2011/07/24/opinion/sunday/​24editorial_graph2.html?ref=su​nday  










On this blog is a link to the Congressional Budget Office's report on the nation's debt: http://crooksandliars.com/john​-amato/cbo-smacks-republicans-




 





What is not clear is why so many Congressmen don't include this information in their discussions, from their own budget office outlook.  Excellent article on what's really happening on regulatory agency funding.  Under Bush, budgets were starved but responsibilities grew and thus criticism grew.  Then Obama tried to fix it by funding them and the Republican House claimed "spending spree" (with no recognition that military spending in 2 unwarranted wars had anything to do with the budget):http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07​/16/business/budget-cuts-to-se​c-reduce-its-effectiveness.htm​l?_r=1  









The reality of the debt by the more conservative "The Economist": http://www.economist.com/node/​18928600?fsrc=scn%2Ftw%2Fte%2F​ar%2Fshameonthem  





A comparison; job loss under Bush vs Obama.  BTW, Bush tax cuts do NOT create jobs:http://flowingdata.com/2010/02​/17/road-to-recovery-is-the-re​covery-act-working/  











How about closing corporate tax loop holes?  Maybe the corporate taxes are too high, but the "effective" taxes or tax rates are not.  These 10 profitable companies paid nothing, while seniors on social security have had no cost-of-living increase for three years: http://www.keepourpromise.org/​index.php/downloads/cat_view/3​7-articles?orderby=dmdate_publ​ished  










No new taxes?  Some history on Bush's turn around, and the Grover pledge:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/​2011/07/12/debt-ceiling-taxes-​republicans_n_895450.html  





Let's not forget that Dick Cheney said that debt didn't matter during the years of the war spending spree:http://www.ontheissues.org/200​4/Dick_Cheney_Budget_+_Economy​.htm 





Conservatives like Bachmann are signing a pledge stating that black children are worse off under Obama than under slavery-- if this isn't scary, I can't help you:http://www.mediaite.com/online​/michele-bachmann-signed-pledg​e-says-black-children-worse-of​f-under-obama-than-during-slav​ery/  





FDR, 1944, Second Bill of Rights Speech: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v​=3EZ5bx9AyI4&feature=related