In the years from 1942 to 2012, the U. S. has enjoyed a 70-year heyday. After our build up for WWII, we became
the undisputed leader of the world in all military, economic, and influential
fronts. It seems fair to assume that we
have been doing things fairly well over the last 70 years, and any idea to
the contrary would be nothing short of experimental. So, instead of engaging in endless debate
about what is healthy for our economy, why don’t we compare our current numbers
to the 70 year average?
What about unemployment? This figure is still quite high, and unemployment is a huge problem in America, right? To the contrary, this appears to be false, because overall employment per capita (workforce) is at a comfortable 49.2%, a full 3.78% above the 70 YA. That is to say, more Americans are at work today than most of the 70 YA, and more than any time prior to 1988. Unemployment is a measure of change in employment. In this case, we are comparing to the absolute highest overall decade of employment in U. S. history (1996-2006). So, contrary to Tea Party rhetoric, America is not living off the government, and we do not need to be starved in order to go to work. We are not under employed. We just happen to be below maximum employment.
So, if more of us are
working, why don’t we feel more successful?
We should, because our average household income of $68,000 is far better
than the 70 YA of only $52,800 (adjusted to 2012 dollars). Perhaps that is why Barack Obama had the gall
to say, “The middle class is doing fine.” On average, we make about 28% more than our
parents did.
So, let’s review: We
make more money than our parents did, and more of us have jobs than our parent’s
generation. We are taxed less than our parents, and the government spends
slightly more on programs than it did for our parents. Maybe it is time for us to think hard about
the real debt problem - modern greed. Tell
your congressman to raise taxes, and find sensible ways to cut the
budget without taking benefits from the poor. This is the “balanced approach”
Obama spoke of last year. The trouble
with congress at this moment is that it doesn't want to do the right
thing. They certainly don't want everyone to know the President was right all along.
(Special thanks to my son, Marcel Fiore, for creating the
dashboard gauges.)
Tony F.
2013
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