[Vision2020] States Where the Middle Class Is Being Left Behind
Kenneth Marcy
kmmos1 at frontier.com
Tue Feb 7 07:47:20 PST 2017
States Where the Middle Class Is Being Left Behind
*http://tinyurl.com/zasj93x
*
By many measures, the U.S. economy is booming: unemployment is close to
a decade-long low; the Federal Reserve recently raised interest rates
for the second time in roughly a decade, signaling confidence in the
economy; and the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached an all-time high
earlier this year.
Despite the nearly decade-long period of growth, there have been signs
the American middle class is being left behind. Over the past five years
alone, incomes among the top 20% of earning households in the United
States rose about 1.5 times faster than that of middle class households.
Incomes among the top 5% of households increased at roughly double the
rate middle class incomes did. In some states, the gap is widening at a
much faster rate. In Wyoming, incomes among the top quintile of
households increased by 12.2%, while the average income among middle
class households rose by just 2.5%. 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the nine
states where the middle class is being left behind.
As the economy has recovered from the Great Recession, a trend began to
develop among the nation’s middle class. Americans who lost their jobs
managed to eventually find work again, but often at a lower pay, or only
part time. The result was that even as the stock market soared and
unemployment improved, incomes among the nation’s middle class — often
referred to as the backbone of the economy — fell.
*Click here to see the states where the middle class is being left
behind.
<http://247wallst.com/special-report/2017/02/07/states-where-the-middle-class-is-disappearing/2/>*
As the recovery continued, however, middle class incomes began to rise
somewhat, growing since 2011 in all but one state. Middle class
household incomes declined by 0.8% in Delaware. However, throughout the
country, and particularly in the nine states on our list, income growth
among the top earners dwarfed the income growth of the middle class. In
the nine states on our list, income growth among the top quintile was
roughly double the growth of the middle quintile, and in the case of
Wyoming and Alaska, it was more than four times that of the middle class.
One possible explanation for the relatively low income growth in some of
the states on this list is, perhaps counterintuitively, the relative
strength of the middle class there. Four states on this list have higher
than average household incomes among the middle quintile. This includes
Alaska, where the average household income in the middle quintile is
about $73,500 a year, roughly $17,500 greater than the national average
household income for the middle class.
Historically, strong labor unions have been integral to a vibrant middle
class. Collective bargaining has helped improve wages, benefits, and
rights for workers, both union and nonunion alike, nationwide. However,
according to the Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank,
union membership has fallen considerably in the last several decades. In
addition to declining membership, labor laws have weakened unions and
their ability to contribute to higher wages. Since union membership
began to rapidly decline in the 1980s, the share of income going to the
top 10% of earners has increased dramatically.
Perhaps because unions are not as influential as they once were, there
does not appear to be a strong overarching pattern between union
membership and stagnant middle class wages. Nationwide, some 11.1% of
all working adults are union members. Among the states where the middle
class is disappearing, unionized workers comprise anywhere from 5.2% of
workers in Arizona to 24.7% in New York.
*7. Idaho*
*> Middle class income growth 2011-2015:* 5.1% (25th lowest)
*> Fifth quintile income growth:* 12.1% (7th highest)
*> Fifth quintile share of income:* 48.8% (14th lowest)
*> Middle class household income:* $48,216 (11th lowest)
Currently, income inequality is less profound in Idaho than it is across
the country. This may not remain the case for long, however. Middle
class incomes in Idaho have not increased as rapidly as they have
nationwide. Meanwhile, income growth among the top 20% of households has
outpaced comparable growth nationwide by a considerable margin.
Historically, labor unions have been a major factor in the economic
vitality of the middle class. The relatively small presence of organized
labor in Idaho may partially explain the slower than average wage growth
among middle income households. Only 6.8% of working adults in Idaho are
unionized, well below the 11.1% of U.S. workers who are.
Ken
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