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Monday, January 18, 2016

Trickle down economics just ain't working people

More Than Half of Americans Reportedly Have Less Than $1,000 to Their Name


In a recent survey, 56 percent of Americans said they have less than $1,000 in their checking and savings accounts combined, Forbes reports. Nearly a quarter (24.8 percent) have less than $100 to their name. Meanwhile, 38 percent said they would pay less than their full credit card balance this month, and 11 percent said they would make the minimum payment—meaning they would likely be mired in debt for years and pay more in interest than they originally borrowed. It paints a daunting picture of the average American coming out of the spend-heavy holiday season: steeped in credit card debt, living paycheck-to-paycheck, at serious risk of financial ruin if the slightest thing goes wrong.
It's a reminder that, while the larger economy has steadily recovered from the Great Recession, the gains have not yet surfaced at the local level. Another study reports that just 65 of the 3,069 counties in the U.S. have fully recovered from the near-collapse in 2008. But it also speaks to the enduring effect of decades of wage stagnation, when many Americans' pay has not kept up with inflation and they have been left further and further behind.

My POV - This is a direct result of "trickle down economics" and is intended to drive down earnings of the working class to increase corporate profits.
It is not a new concept but rather a system that has existed since human first began to walk upright. It is the peasant system whereby those in a position of wealth and authority control what the middle and bottom tier of the human chain can or cannot achieve.
The system in North America began to deteriorate during the Reagan years and has accelated since the Bush administration.
Free trade and the movement to One World Economics, a corporate theory, is not working. It is failing the middle and blue collar class by trying to compete with the Third World economies.
We sit and gleefully watch reality shows that feature the restoration of abandoned homes around America and at no time do we consider the lives that have been destroyed, the hurt that has been caused or what and where are these once prosperous families now living.

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