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Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 3:38 AM
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Rebuid middle class by infrastructure investment

Rebuilding the middle class

Forget tax cuts and minimum-wage hikes; it's time for massive infrastructure projects that put millions to work in well-paying jobs.
By Joel Kotkin and David Friedman, JOEL KOTKIN is an Irvine senior fellow at the New America Foundation and the author of "The City: A Global History." DAVID FRIEDMAN is also a senior fellow at the foundation.

December 3, 2006


OVER THE LAST 20 years, the United States has regressed into what one economist calls a "plutonomy" — a society in which the largest economic gains flow to an ever smaller portion of the population. According to recent economic statistics, from 1999 to 2004, the inflation-adjusted income of the bottom 90% of all U.S. households grew by 2%, compared with a 57% jump for the richest 10%. Incomes rose by more than 87% for households annually making $1 million and more than doubled for those that take home about $20 million a year.

Most disturbingly, workers losing the most economic ground are not the uneducated and unskilled but those with high school, community college and even four-year degrees. Overall, the middle class, in relative if not absolute terms, has lost purchasing power, especially in big coastal cities where the highest earners and the super-rich have driven up prices for housing and the cost of living. Globalization and automation have not only hurt manufacturing workers but also mid-level managers, engineers and software programmers. Despite enormous media and stock market hype, for instance, the U.S. has lost more than 700,000 information industry jobs since early 2001.

Is there any way to restore the prospects of middle- and working-class Americans? A comprehensive program to rebuild the nation's highways and bridges, upgrade its ports, construct and expand its energy lifelines and enlarge its public transportation systems could generate hundreds of thousands of good-paying jobs. Admittedly, this back-to-basics strategy is not glamorous. But it has helped narrow economic inequality in the past by producing more balanced economic growth.

During the 1930s, for instance, the government sought to narrow the enormous wealth disparities caused by the Depression by putting people to work on an unprecedented number of infrastructure improvements. About 3 million workers, many of them unemployed, were organized to build roads, bridges and dams. They planted millions of trees in middle America to prevent soil erosion. They built transportation networks that helped cities increase their industrial productivity. Rural electrification programs lifted sections of the Midwest and South out of darkness.

In the 1950s, under the Eisenhower administration, construction began on an interstate highway system that, when completed, reduced travel times and made the economy more efficient. By promoting suburban development, the new roads also sparked an unprecedented growth in homeownership for working- and middle-class families.

The result was one of the most balanced periods of prosperity in U.S. history. As ordinary Americans prospered, the share of the nation's wealth controlled by the top 10% of the population fell from nearly 50% in the 1930s to about 30% in the 1960s. Yes, the super-rich did quite well. But coupled with such government programs as the GI Bill and housing for veterans, the infrastructure projects helped give more Americans access to higher education and homeownership.

Both Democrats and Republicans have largely abandoned policies that led to balanced economic expansion. Liberals tend to favor social programs that redistribute income to the less privileged, while conservatives resist nonmilitary spending. As a result, since the mid-1960s, spending on public infrastructure has fallen from more than 3% of gross domestic product to about 2.5%. As the quality of roads, bridges, schools, sanitation and healthcare fell, wealth shifted away from the middle and working classes. Measures of income inequality skyrocketed from relatively low levels in the 1950-1970 period to postwar highs in the late 1990s.

Of course, lack of infrastructure spending was not the only culprit. But minimal investment in public projects that boost the economy's productivity certainly has not helped. By contrast, countries such as China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan have poured billions of dollars into upgrading airports, transit systems, schools and roads, and their economies have benefited.

The scale of today's economic inequality in the U.S. can be eye-popping. Since 1980, for instance, Manhattan's inequality rate has risen from 17th to first among all U.S. counties. The richest 20% in the borough now earns 52 times what the lowest fifth does, a disparity roughly comparable with Namibia. Last month, just as Wall Street hailed record bonuses of more than $25 billion, thousands of New Yorkers lined up for 185 jobs — 65 of them full time — at the M&M's World theme store in Times Square. The starting salary was $10.75 an hour, though the benefits package was generous by comparison with most entry-level jobs.

Similar wealth concentration is occurring throughout the country. California is home to one of the world's highest number of billionaires and multimillionaires, but one in five children live in poverty here. A 2000 study by the California legislative analyst's office showed that 20% of San Francisco's population took home more than 60% of the Bay Area's income, the worst inequality in the state. In Los Angeles County, 20% of the population pocketed about 55% of the region's income.

The current favored policy proposals will do little to change economic disparity. The Republican package of high-end tax cuts, pork-barrel spending projects such as the bridge to nowhere in Alaska and near-total neglect of the country's industrial base by generally ignoring unfair trade practices constitutes a veritable formula for continued inequality. That's one reason why the party lost power in the November midterm elections despite overall solid economic growth and a record-breaking stock market.

Democrats also have few answers. Many focus on increasing the U.S. minimum wage or expanding the "living wage" movement that has taken hold in Los Angeles and San Francisco. But the chief beneficiaries of these policies are younger part-time workers, not primary household wage-earners. One study by the Public Policy Institute of California shows that such measures, while boosting the wages of those affected by them, also reduce overall regional employment by as much as 6% to 8% among lower-skilled workers.

Others push for higher taxes on the "rich," a strategy that would have little effect on multimillionaires and billionaires, who can afford legal and financial advisors who protect their wealth. Most Democrats don't want to restrict wealthy people's use of private environmental trusts or activist foundations to dodge taxes because many of these entities are among their most fervent supporters. Instead, it's those in the $100,000-to-$300,000-a-year range who would feel the pinch of higher taxes, many of whom are small-business owners and professionals who create jobs in costly urban areas.

Indeed, the net result of decades of liberal urban policy — mixed-price residential developments, high taxes on professionals and small businesses, environmental and business regulation and mandated wage rates — has been to drive more and more middle-class workers out of urban areas. A recent Brookings Institution report showed that heavily Democratic regions such as Boston, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco are precisely the places where middle-class neighborhoods are most endangered.

The best way to reverse these trends is to return to those policies that produced a vibrant, economically well-balanced society: creating jobs by investing in infrastructure and promoting people's technical skills. According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, $1.6 trillion worth of infrastructure projects are required but yet to be started.

Thousands of production jobs go begging in this nation not because of foreign competition but because of a lack of skilled workers willing or able to obtain basic machinery training. As one Houston factory manager, echoing findings across the country, remarked recently, it is easier to find an engineer than an experienced machinist or welder.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's rebuilding project for California, an estimated $43-billion effort that could generate more than 700,000 jobs, is a step in the right direction. There also are alternatives to public debt. Today, many needed public investments can be — and in some places are — privately financed. By steering capital — through tax breaks and incentives — now flowing to speculative Internet stocks and luxury condominiums toward roads, bridges and electricity lines that can carry surplus power from the heartland to urban consumers, productivity can be enhanced and large numbers of blue- and white-collar jobs created.

To be sure, a back-to-basics economic growth strategy would conflict with certain deeply held but flawed political nostrums. Most Republicans would resist any notion that government should have a larger role in promoting the aspirations of Americans, although precisely this belief animated the Eisenhower administration's interstate highway system. Many upscale liberals probably would be hesitant to embrace a full-blown program to rebuild the infrastructure because of its possibly harmful effects on the environment. Others claim that training for "knowledge" jobs should take precedence over that for manufacturing or trade occupations.

All of the essentials — capital, a willingness to work and a undeniable need to rebuild our infrastructure and expand worker skills — for a program that would directly address our steadily worsening class divide are already in place. All we lack now is the political willingness to embrace this opportunity.

Last edited by KB0679; Dec 5, 2006 at 3:48 AM.
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  #2  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 3:52 AM
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Yay, Joel Kotkin.
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Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 3:54 AM
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That said, I find it interesting Kotkin would actually advocate the construction of massive New Deal-esque infrastructure projects largely for the sake of creating middle class jobs.
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Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 3:55 AM
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hey... it's SSP's favourite urban thinker!
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  #5  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 4:12 AM
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I thought our favorite "urban thinker" was Chicago103... if he were to ever run for public office, he should run on the slogan, "John Hancock tower 91st floor studios for all!"
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  #6  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 5:57 AM
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What is conveniently forgotten is that there are two or three distint "types" of middle-class. Upper middle class, lower middle class, and something else I can't remember (sociology bores me.)
The middle class is not composed of people who have degrees from "high school, community colleges" to exclusion. Most of these people are lower-middle class anyway, and likely to fall into poverty as the industrial, no-skill jobs disappear.
A real middle class is actually the vast majority of people who, incidentally, pay the vast majority of taxes. It isn't the wealthy who pay the most taxes, nor is it the poor who shoulder the burden. It's families earning $100k plus a year from single-earner or multi-earner household income.
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During the 1930s, for instance, the government sought to narrow the enormous wealth disparities caused by the Depression by putting people to work on an unprecedented number of infrastructure improvements.

Christ. I'm not even American and I know better than to say this. The 1930's labor programs were not made to "narrow the enormous wealth disparities" at all. This sounds like popularist misunderstanding of the facts. The programs involving the Hoover Dam, Tennessee Valley, etc etc etc were done because the unemployment rate was horrifically high. Even Roosevelt couldn't plausibly take advantage of that many poor with welfare alone.
It's a very interesting article on the problems of infrastructure, and it does have some interesting inferences. In California there is a conception of "the rich", from here on out to be referred to solely as Them, as people unwilling to pay for services they don't use (users of said services assumed to be poor and unfortunate, hereafter referred to as Us.) What I think it lacks is solid interpretation.
There's only one problem with the maldistribution of income: revolts.
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the inflation-adjusted income of the bottom 90% of all U.S. households grew by 2%, compared with a 57% jump for the richest 10%.
What confuses and irritates me are these assumptions. First the statement that the "plutocracy" favors the fewest possible minority. And then this blatant ignoring of the facts; whose average is going to appear larger, 10 people earning 100 million more a year in investments, or 2.67 million people earning ~20k more a year in salaries/wages payable?
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  #7  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 8:03 AM
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"Middle class" is a convenient rhetoric term. Most Americans consider themselves "middle class" and therefore when anything is done for the middle class at the expense of the non-middle class, everyone supports it.

I'd like to see this guy try to keep inflation down spending billions of dollars of government programs at full employment. Or how bout, at the very least, keep the federal budget deficit below 4% of annual gdp.
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Old Posted Dec 5, 2006, 9:24 AM
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I simply find it amazing that the authors can recall the era spoken of in the following quote with such rose-colored nostalgia:

Quote:
In the 1950s, under the Eisenhower administration, construction began on an interstate highway system that, when completed, reduced travel times and made the economy more efficient. By promoting suburban development, the new roads also sparked an unprecedented growth in homeownership for working- and middle-class families.

The result was one of the most balanced periods of prosperity in U.S. history. As ordinary Americans prospered, the share of the nation's wealth controlled by the top 10% of the population fell from nearly 50% in the 1930s to about 30% in the 1960s. Yes, the super-rich did quite well. But coupled with such government programs as the GI Bill and housing for veterans, the infrastructure projects helped give more Americans access to higher education and homeownership.
I guess we should try to recreate urban renewal, redlining, racial steering, deindustrialization, etc.
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 10:14 AM
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Well considering that the Unemployment rate for those without a High School Degree is at 5%, the lowest rate of a major nation of the world, the premise on which the very perceived need is founded on is invalid.

Not that I am advocating not massive spending on infrastructure, on the contrary, I am just not arguing for it to be down for the stated reason, which sounds like FDR's failed policy. FDR experimented, his experiments failed. Government kept trying to fix the problem that it itself created, yet it did not even know how it created the problem and thus it did not know how fix the problem, which eventually led to them exacerbating the problem.


Want to help the middle class? Grow the economy so fast that they themselves are dragged up off their 5 acre private island and dropped on a 10 acre island.

Last edited by austin356; Dec 6, 2006 at 10:20 AM.
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 11:05 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KB0679
I simply find it amazing that the authors can recall the era spoken of in the following quote with such rose-colored nostalgia:



I guess we should try to recreate urban renewal, redlining, racial steering, deindustrialization, etc.
Yeah, the old-school conservatives almost have a wet dream when they look back on the good, ole days (i.e. pre-1960's). But, then again, it's not hard to see why they wave nostalgic about these days. Damn those 1960's with their radical ideas of desegregation, civil rights, and other wacky social reforms that ground these country to a screeching halt. lol
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 3:05 PM
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who needs infrastructure? a moon base is obviously cooler and more useful.
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 3:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LMich
Yeah, the old-school conservatives almost have a wet dream when they look back on the good, ole days (i.e. pre-1960's). But, then again, it's not hard to see why they wave nostalgic about these days. Damn those 1960's with their radical ideas of desegregation, civil rights, and other wacky social reforms that ground these country to a screeching halt. lol
The guys that wrote this article resemble FDR much more so than any modern day conservative. (although I guess the 2 can often times be similar)
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 10:05 PM
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Originally Posted by crisp444
I thought our favorite "urban thinker" was Chicago103... if he were to ever run for public office, he should run on the slogan, "John Hancock tower 91st floor studios for all!"
Why thank you . That being said I must say that if everyone heeded what I said and not necessarily lived exactly like me, but in a similar way there would be alot less problems with infrastructure (particularly public transporation) and all that. Someone may think I am elitest for saying that but you cant really deny its true.
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 10:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chicago103
Why thank you . That being said I must say that if everyone heeded what I said and not necessarily lived exactly like me, but in a similar way there would be alot less problems with infrastructure (particularly public transporation) and all that. Someone may think I am elitest for saying that but you cant really deny its true.
No, an elitist will point out that you misspelled elitist. crisp was joking. you're kind of the court jester 'round these parts

You know, if you had been content with a studio in Logan Square instead of in the Hancock Center, you could've sponsored several Feed-the-Children babies. Your selfish indulgence and desire to live in a landmark cost Fatima her beans.
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Old Posted Dec 6, 2006, 10:38 PM
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Originally Posted by arbeiter
No, an elitist will point out that you misspelled elitist. crisp was joking. you're kind of the court jester 'round these parts

You know, if you had been content with a studio in Logan Square instead of in the Hancock Center, you could've sponsored several Feed-the-Children babies. Your selfish indulgence and desire to live in a landmark cost Fatima her beans.
I know crisp was joking, I was just playing along with my role of: .
That being said I try to make my arugments both insightfull and yet bordering on the absurd and funny at the same time, like a satire of the suburban culture. If you feel you cant do much about the sad state of affairs why not have a few laughs in making fun of it?
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Old Posted Dec 7, 2006, 1:38 AM
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Quote:
That said, I find it interesting Kotkin would actually advocate the construction of massive New Deal-esque infrastructure projects largely for the sake of creating middle class jobs.
Yeah, me too, given his otherwise somewhat conservative, laissez faire POV.

The proposal is really quite "retro", isn't it?

Quote:
n the 1950s, under the Eisenhower administration, construction began on an interstate highway system that, when completed, reduced travel times and made the economy more efficient. By promoting suburban development, the new roads also sparked an unprecedented growth in homeownership for working- and middle-class families.

The result was one of the most balanced periods of prosperity in U.S. history. As ordinary Americans prospered, the share of the nation's wealth controlled by the top 10% of the population fell from nearly 50% in the 1930s to about 30% in the 1960s.
The vast majority of the posters are too young to remember this era. I do, a little bit, as i was young then too, but there was a very broad-based prosperity. Many here know the 1960s as history of urban riots and such, but a lot of what was going on then was a "revolution of rising expectations", where groups that had been excluded where making their bid for a share of this broad based prosperity, and in fact where starting to share in it.

What happened since, with de-industrialization and offshoring, was a very long term decline in the standard of living for a large segement of US population.

It was sort of a golden age back then, and what made it more golden was the expectation that it would continue and expand.

But that golden age is long gone. A big infrastructure program wont bring it back.
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