What's happened to America's middle class?Baby boomers See generation X. like me grew up in a relatively equal society. In the 1960s, America was a place in which very few people were extremely wealthy, many blue-collar workers blue-collar worker n → obrero/a blue-collar worker n → ouvrier/ère col bleu blue-collar worker n → earned wages that placed them comfortably in the middle class, and working ramifies could expect steadily rising riving standards and a reasonable degree of economic security. That middle-class society no longer exists. Working families have seen little if any progress over the past 30 years in average income. And economic security is a thing of the past: Art it takes is a bit of bad tuck in employment or health to plunge a family into poverty. But the wealthy have done very well indeed. Since 1980 in particular, U.S. government policies have favored the wealthy at the expense of working families, from tax cuts to bankruptcy "reform." The reason for concern is that a society in which most people can be considered middle class is a better society--and more likely to be a functioning democracy--than one in which there are great extremes of wealth and poverty. Reversing the rise in inequality inequality, in mathematics, statement that a mathematical expression is less than or greater than some other expression; an inequality is not as specific as an equation, but it does contain information about the expressions involved. and economic insecurity Insecurity Inseparability (See FRIENDSHIP.) Insolence (See ARROGANCE.) Hamlet introspective, vacillating Prince of Denmark. [Br. Lit.: Hamlet] Linus cartoon character who is lost without his security blanket. won't be easy, but let's try to do something about the politics of greed Greed See also Stinginess. Almayer’s Folly lust for gold leads to decline. [Br. Lit.: Almayer’s Folly] Alonso Shakespearean symbol of avarice. [Br. Lit. .--Paul Krugman [6/10/05] |
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