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2006 Injustice Indexhttp://www.spartacuslives.org/node/3276 DMI's 2006 Injustice Index "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." Wages that an average CEO earns before lunchtime: more than a full-time minimum wage worker makes in a year Ratio of the average U.S. CEO's annual pay to a minimum wage worker's: 821:1 Year when this ratio reached its highest so far: 2006 Total compensation in 2005 of Barry Diller of IAC/Interactive, the highest paid CEO in the US today: $469 million Additional amount that Mr. Diller received in new stock options "to motivate Mr. Diller for future performance": $7.6 million Percentage of Americans who feel chronically overworked: 30 Years of unused vacation time that American workers collectively give back to their employers each year: 1.6 million Percentage of women earning less than $40,000 per year who receive no paid vacation time at all: 37 Payment per episode that Donald Trump receives to host The Apprentice: $3,000,000 Average amount that companies spend to recruit a new CEO from outside the company: $2,000,000 Probability that the newly hired CEO will either quit or be fired within the first eighteen months: 1 in 2 Estimated number of people lined up outside the new M&M store set to open in Times Square responding to ads for "on-the-spot" hiring for 200 jobs, 65 of which were fulltime: between 5,000 and 6,000 Starting salary that drew them there: $10.75 per hour Fee Paris Hilton is seeking to host a New Year's Eve party in NYC, Miami, or L.A.: $100,000 plus a private jet Amount that Ms. Hilton is set to inherit from the Hilton Hotel fortune: 350 $million Number of times that Congress has reduced the estate tax since it last raised the federal minimum wage: 9 Longest period in which the federal minimum wage has not been increased: 1997-2006 Number of workers who would directly benefit from an increase in the minimum wage: 5.6 million Number of very large estates that would directly benefit from a reduction in the estate tax: 8,200 Highest price per custom-fitted, handmade power suit in Armani's new line, which hopes to respond to what ex-Gucci head designer Tom Ford calls "a lot of pent-up demand for true luxury [from men who] are getting rich first, and they want to deck themselves out before they deck out their wives": $20,000 Number of households using credit to cover basic living expenses: 7 in 10 Amount in tax breaks and subsidies that last year's energy bill paid out to the gas and oil industry during a period of record profits and higher prices at the pump: $6 billion Campaign donations that Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, who voted for the energy bill, received from the oil and gas industry: $500,000, making her the top recipient of oil contributions in the 2006 election cycle Percentage of U.S. workers who are confident they will be able to live comfortably after retirement: 68 Percentage who have saved less than $25,000 toward their retirement: 53 Percent of African-American and Latino families that have zero or negative net worth, respectively: 31 and 38 Date on which USA Today reported that Dr. Anthony Griffin of the Beverly HillsCosmetic Surgery Institute, who appears on the ABC program Extreme Makeover, predicted that CEOs will lead a surge inmale cosmetic surgery because, he says, "for instance,executives on trial for corporatescandals would improve theirchances for acquittal with amakeover just before trial": November 4, 2006 Date on which the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached its all-time high: October 26, 2006 Decrease in percentage of Americans who own stocks from 2004 to 2006, the first such decline on record: 51.9% to 48.6% Total Wal-Mart received in government subsidies, sometimes called "corporate welfare" by activists, in 2005: $3.75 billion Percent of the decline in welfare caseloads that is due to TANF programs failing to serve families that are poor enough to qualify, rather than due to a reduction in the number of families poor enough to qualify for aid, in the ten years since "welfare reform": 57 Percentage of the GDP that went to wages and salaries in the first half of 2006: 51.8 Time when the percentage of GDP belonging to wages and salaries was lower than in 2006, out of the 77 previous years for which these data are available: never Projected total in Christmas bonuses that investment banks in New York City will pay out in 2006: $23.9 billion Estimated additional amount U.S. workers would receive annually if all employers obeyed workplace laws: $19 billion Ratio of compensation of CEOs of publicly traded defense companies to privates before September 11th, 2001: 190 to 1 Ratio in 2006: 308 to 1 Percentage increase in out-of-pocket medical expenses for the average American in the past 5 years: 93 Estimated amount the U.S. would save each year on paperwork if it adopted single-payer health care: $161,000,000,000 Date on which incoming Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson announced "Amid this country's strong economic expansion, many Americans simply aren't feeling the benefits. Many aren't seeing significant increases in their take-home pay. Their increases in wages are being eaten up by high energy prices and rising health care costs, among others": August 2, 2006 According to exit polls in the midterm elections, percentage of Americans who think life for the next generation will be about the same or worse respectively: 28, 40 [This Injustice Index is one section among many in DMI's 2006 Year in Review. For more on the state of the American Dream in 2006 - including a summary of the Best and Worst of public policy this year, a status report on the States, a look at how the think tanks of the conservative Right have been spending their time and money in 2006, and interviews with eight people impacting America through Progressive Public Policy - please check out DMI's Year in Review online. http://www.DrumMajorInstitute.org/YearInReview ] |
I blame the Marxist's.
I blame the Marxist's. They have had a 150 years to stop capitalism and all they've done is complain. That seems to be a common thread in the intellectual community.
Can one be an intellectual without being a Marxist? If one were an intellectual why would one want to be a Marxist?
“For us in Russia communism is a dead dog. For many people in the West, it is still a living lion.”
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Re: I blame the Marxist's.
There's an amount of truth in that. But on the other hand, I think many Marxists did not foresee that capitalists would unite like they have, and that capitalists would be so ruthless in opposing Marxism.
Take Chile. The elected Chilean Marxist, Allende, made huge, fundamental improvements to the Chilean economy in his relatively short time in office. He nationalized the copper industry and broke up the semi-feudal large estates and distributed the land to the poor.
These two items laid the groundwork for the fascist economic "success story" of the 80s and 90s in Chile. Copper was(is) a huge source of gov't revenue thanks to Allende's nationalization, which was only partially reversed under the fascists. And the success of the land reform was the critical item in Chile's agricultural boom that we can see every day in our supermarkets.
But the capitalists' response? Fascism. Death squads and disappearences by the tens of thousands. I doubt many Chilean Marxists anticipated that level of terror.
Re: I blame the Marxist's.
I wonder what Solzhenitsyn thinks today of his Russia. A majority of Russians moan the demise of the Soviet Union, and a near-majority even thinks life was better under the USSR.
But that ignores the state of the US, which is the point of the article.
In the US, real (after-inflation) wages declined from 1973 to the late 90s. Then, after a couple of years of small increases under Clinton, they've continued their downward move.
In the US the gap between the rich and the poor is higher than at any time since the 1920s (and we know what happened after the 1920s "gilded age" ended).
The issue of class and corporate power are issues that Americans are taught to ignore. Our Horatio Alger, anyone-can-get-rich lessons are taught to us in countless ways. But the reality is hitting home with more and more people, as these stats point out.
So what's the solution? A drug and alcohol-induced ignorance of bliss? More of the same pro-market, pro-privatization policies and rhetoric that created the gap/problems in the first place?
Poverty and The Donald
"Our Horatio Alger, anyone-can-get-rich lessons are taught to us in countless ways."
Donald Trump is an excellent example of the Alger story. He came from a poor family which could only provide him seed money and he converted those hundreds of millions of dollars to billions. Anyone can do that.
Once one gains the power, one can insult women. The Donald does it with enthusiasm.
The answer to the world's poverty is Armageddon. When the worlds population's starvation level reaches the breaking point, those still able to stand will kill billions and the cycle of the Oligarch will start again.
Ignoring class and corporate power
Quote:
The issue of class and corporate power are issues that Americans are taught to ignore.
Despite its reputation in the media for being leftist, U.S. academia frequently ignores those aspects of the West's theoretical traditions that threaten capitalist practices.
For example, if you take any sort of a course on Thomas Aquinas, you are likely to read about the five proofs for the existence of God. What you are not likely to read is the Summa Theologica article on theft (S.T. II.II.Q66.Art.7) where Aquinas argues that God's thou-shalt-not-steal commandment is not violated by the poor who take from the rich, but by the rich who withhold from the poor.
If you take a course on John Locke's political or economic theory, you are likely to read the Second Treatise of Government where Locke defends private property. What you are not likely to read is the *First* Treatise of Government where Locke argues that the poor have "a Right to the Surplusage" of the rich (1st Treatise, Chap. IV, Sect. 42). Locke's defense of this right is constructed in such a way that you cannot reject the right without also undermining the justification of private property found in the 2nd Treatise.
I also find it curious that very few people seem to devote any attention to Alexis de Toqueville's warning in Vol. 2, Bk. II, Chap. 20 of Democracy in America that the then newly emerging manufacturing economy had the potential for transforming America's democracy into an aristocracy far more cruel than any aristocracy previously seen on the planet.
--oldfolio