Great job, London.
The Great American Paycheck Squeeze
Fair warning – this may end up being one of those long, whiny political posts, so if you aren’t into that sort of thing, just skip down to the next post. But if you are interested in my perspective of things, I’ll do my best to rationally and constructively explain myself. Either way, I’m sure I’m going to be called some names, but sometimes I just want to throw some stuff out there.
As many of you know, I love watching CBS Sunday Morning. Yes, I attend church (well, most of the time) so I end up recording it on the DVR so I can watch it later in the day. I like to describe it as NPR for TV, I always feel a bit more cultured, educated, and enlightened after watching it.
Yesterday they had a segment about the American salary. You can read an abbreviated version of the segment here, but I posted the entire segment on YouTube that you can watch below if you are interested.
A few parts of the segment got my attention, but these two screengrabs really stood out.
Per the graph, as productivity increased, so did wages, up to around somewhere in the seventies. The video states the year 1979, but the summary article I linked to above states “around 1970.” So sometimes in the seventies as productivity increased, wages for the typical worker did not, but the salary of wages skyrocketed.
So what happened around that time to cause executive compensation to increase and workers to level off even as productivity increased? Tax cuts for corporations, and this is the reason why I’m not a big fan of the corporate tax cut. Many of my conservative friends will argue that corporate tax cuts will allow businesses to grow and add more workers, and that the income made by the wealthy create jobs for the middle and lower class. But here’s my take . . .
When corporations receive a tax cut, instead of using those extra funds to grow the company or hire more workers, those funds are instead used to increase the salaries of the executives in charge, which both of those screengrabs above support, which means that the rich only get richer while the middle and lower classes are stuck in a curmudgeon.
As for the argument that the income of the wealthy create jobs for the middle and lower class, I can’t completely refute that rationale. However, it’s my thinking that if the exuberant salaries were diverted from the executives to the workers, the middle and lower class, then the buying power of both of those classes would benefit the economy, and that the increased buying power of those two large classes would be better for the economy than that of a smaller wealthy class that purchases luxery goods.
Some may argue that if stockholders are upset at the salaries that are being paid to the executives are outlandish, then the stockholders would display their anger. That’s another argument I can’t agree with since the major shareholders of these companies are insurance and mutual fund giants – people that are all in the same club (probably country club). Once again, the middle and lower class are stuck in a curmudgeon.
I have a feeling some of you are calling me nothing more than a bleeding heart liberal and a socialism lover, but that’s not my intent as I type this at an hour in which I should be asleep. I love capitalism, but I think the tax laws just favor the corporations more than they do the individual, and unjustifiably so.
You certainly don’t have to agree with anything I said, but I hope I was able to express my perspectives regarding these issues in a rational, constructive and non-offensive manner.
Bag of Randomness
- Two feet of snow . . . get it?
- Sidney Crosby was won the Stanley Cub and a gold medal all at the age of 22, not a bad life. I wonder if that poor guy has any trouble finding a date?
- I think it’s fair to say that when it comes to Olympics sports, the Canadians want to win the gold in hockey as much as the Americans want to win the gold in basketball.
- Tweet that made my laugh via @dcmba: Hockey: The first time the USA has ever seen Canada as a threat.
- And thanks to one of my more loyal Canadian readers for sending me this article on how Obama lost a bet to the Canadian prime minister regarding that hockey game.
- I finally figured out what the Vancouver Olympic torch reminded me of . . . Superman’s Fortress of Solitude.
- One Olympic sport that definitely needs to be brought back, tug-of-war. It was last played in the 1920 Olympiad.
- I have no idea if the use of ‘Olympiad’ in the previous sentence is correct, but it sounds cooler than just saying “Olympics.”
- Back in the day Russia use to be a force in the Winter Olympics, this year they won gold only three times. Medal Count
- One example of what makes my wife such a good and supporting teacher – on her weekend she attends many of her students’ sporting events.
- This weekend I got to meet one of my most loyal readers who extended me some grace I’m extremely thankful for. There truly are some really good people in the world.
- WifeGeeding’s sister is helping to build a home in East Texas that will be part of ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. Yes, the house is actually built in a week, but the hosts of the show really don’t help out all that much, mainly contributing to only the begining and ending segments.
- All men know this unwritten public restroom rule
- This person thinks that if the Bible wasn’t ignored, the Sea World trainer would still be alive.
- Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has declared Python Season – Maybe something like this would be a change of pace for loyal reader Scott of Wise County.
- Flight canceled because two female flight attendants got in a fight. As my blogging friend Barry would say, hey now. No pictures, so just leave it all to your imagination.
- Finally, new episodes of House, HIMYM, and The Big Bang Theory.
- For all you fans of the comic The Family Circus, here’s their 50th anniversary strip.
- Felicity had iPads back in1999?
- If Buzz Lightyear was human
- Reading Rainbow
- Some great pics – A Brief History of Olympic Sore Losers
- This goat pulled a Sarah Palin.
- A Flickr set of money that has been drawn on
- Because if this article about Chuck Liddell, I now know that Reebok is a subsidiary of the German company Adidas.
- A congresswoman lost re-election back in 2006 and has never returned to her office to pick up her car. There’s a very thick coat of dust covering it.
- Adam and Eve in the Friend Zone – YouTube
- A strange story about shoes in South Korea.
- Jim Carrey is now a grandfather.