Bureau of Labor Statistics releases latest estimate of how much labor receives of national income, showing bleak decline
When Jesse Motte began working at a Starbucks inside a Target store in Columbia, South Carolina, more than two years ago, $15 an hour sounded great. He was excited to start because it was the most he had ever made after working for years in the service industry.
The excitement has dissipated due to his inconsistent and erratic work schedule, the rising costs of necessities and the minuscule raises he and his co-workers receive annually. His most recent annual wage increase was $0.37 an hour.
Motte is not alone. This week, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its latest estimate for the share labor receives of national income for the first quarter of 2024. The statistics shows the income workers receive compared to the productivity their labor generates.
According to BLS, this income share has declined for non-farm workers from around two-thirds, 64.1% in the first quarter of 2001, to 55.8% in the first quarter of 2024.
This is 100% the result of Reagan's trickle down economics, a policy his own Vice President called 'voo-doo economics.*'
In 1980, 'middle class' was still seen as one income supporting a family of four. By the time Bush Sr. was through, 'middle class' meaning two jobs was established as the norm.
*Bush used the phrase before Reagan offered him the Number 2 job; suddenly he was fine with it.
It's not just Reagan. The same is happening all over the world, including Europe. And his policies were 40 years ago. At some point, we need to own our own problems.
The real issue is that the rich people worldwide have figured out how to mostly avoid paying taxes, while the middle class bears the brunt of taxation - which prevents them from becoming wealthy - and the lower class gets nothing.
That wasn't Reagan, it would have happened even if FDR had become an immortal vampire and had the New Deal lasted a century.
What we really need is to start taxing the rich and to greatly reduce taxation on the middle class. And we need to really get serious about it.
The US government can spend millions to track down and kill a Shepard in Syria, but they can't find the capital gains on Jeff Bezos portfolio.
The core problem isn’t tax policy. That’s a symptom of the problem. The problem is power. Capitalists have it as an inherent property of their class. Workers can have power, but only collectively. Individual workers can’t exercise much power. Therefore, in the absence of a check to their power, capitalists use it to enhance it further.
Make people poor and dependent on employment and consumption so that they’re desperate enough to accept poor pay and working conditions.
Atomize workers so they can’t realize their collective power.
Use ownership over media and communications platforms to put out favorable propaganda and discredit those opposed to capitalist interests.
Use bribes campaign contributions to subvert democracy and shape the government to their will, such as tax policy , labor law, business and financial regulations, and imperialist foreign policy.
No lasting gains can be made for the working class while capitalists hold this power. Any policy can be watered down, repealed, or resisted by capitalists given time. There is no structural way for a system built by and for capitalist interests to reign in the power of that class.
It’s an income issue as well as a cost of living issue.
I have some friends who had a kid a couple years ago. Both work in tech, and have salaries in the 6-figure range, and childcare was going to be so insanely expensive that they were debating whether or not one of them should straight up quit to be a full time parent for a bit, because childcare was going to be more expensive than one of their monthly take home salaries.
And simultaneously, we have politicians wondering why birth rates are plummeting.
A lot of the hangup I see coming from older generations is that around "unskilled labour" that is the hardest to combat. They don't get that labour is requiring less people and less skill in general. My Dad's era something as simple as utilizing maps and finding your way around a stretch of wilderness or even a city was a matter of experience. There was strength in how irreplaceable personal experience was. Now it's GPS assisted and basically any idiot can get where their going in a city they have never been before utilizing the fastest and most direct route. The same goes for computer assisted and manufacturing jobs. High levels of skill that take years to master is now largely something utilized for hobbies or bespoke craft and the fact that to a capitalistic sense we are individually depreciating in value to common pawns is something that is being banked on. The power of labour is dwindling on both an individual and mass scale. There is less skilled labour needed and less labour needed overall. We are all more speedily than ever becoming more replacable with any random body off the street.
But the idea of a meritocracy where the harder jobs are rewarded more remains and makes sense to people. They cling to that hardest. They just don't see that making all the jobs unskilled and making unskilled jobs worth absolute peanuts that pushes hardship onto vast swaths of the population is causing the whole system to fail.