Tuesday, June 24, 2014

The State of Our Union


The fine line between rich and poor has been progressively widening in recent years to the point that it would take an Olympic long-jumper to clear that line.  Now, “poor” can have multiple definitions depending on the person describing the situation.  The notorious “1%” might argue that “poor” means not being able to maintain gasoline and insurance costs on each of their sports cars as well as the very practical SUV used for taking Junior to soccer practice.  Never mind that the SUV in question is an Escalade.  Junior has the right to such luxuries and shouldn’t be deprived.  After all, what would the Hampton neighbors say?

That, of course, is a definition not likely held by, well, 99% of the U.S. population.  It is that very fact which underlines the point I wish to make: middle and lower class American citizens are struggling ever harder to make monthly ends meet, and that struggle shows no sign of lessening anytime soon.  There truly seems to be an oligarchy of the Corporate 1% pulling strings and controlling cash flow within this country that keeps the majority of us gasping for fiscal air.  When profits lag, jobs are outsourced to other companies.  No health insurance required for those workers.  And then there’s the tax write-offs those same companies get for transferring employment overseas.  So what if they had to cut a thousand American jobs.  Their bottom line becomes ever more solid as the unemployment line becomes ever longer.

I read an article on CNN.com a couple of weeks ago in which an economic expert announced that the United States is about to re-achieve the same number of jobs it had in 2008.  Sounds fantastic, doesn’t it?  We as a country will have finally returned to a relative place of prosperity where the markets will expand, paychecks will increase, and spending for the masses may once more reach a healthy level.  But wait: five years have passed since 2008.  How many high school and college graduates have flooded the job market during that time?  According to the article I read, approximately 15 million new graduates have begun looking for jobs between 2008 and 2014.  So, the jobs lost during the severe economic downturn six years ago have been replaced, but dramatically larger numbers of people are in need of jobs that didn’t even exist in 2008. 

I have a Bachelor’s degree as well as eighteen years of work experience as an administrative/executive assistant and still lost my job in June of 2008.  I searched for six months before running out of money, losing my apartment, and having to move in with relatives in my hometown.  I took whatever job I could find and am now making $10,000 less per year than I had been making.  I won’t be moving out on my own again for some time.  Even with my education and experience, employers don’t want to pay me a living wage.  Why?  Because they don’t have to.  The market is flooded with prospective employees.  It’s an employer’s market, and as a result, they—Corporate America—set the wage levels wherever they care to. 

I'm totally middle cass, and I'm struggling.  So what about the truly poor in this country?  What about the under-educated and under-experienced?  How will they survive until and unless the economy improves dramatically?  Yes, there has been some recovery within the last year or two, but we’re a long, long way from w here we need to be for a financially healthy society.  For now, I’m afraid the poor will continue to become poorer, the middle class will sink ever lower, and the rich?  Well, my guess is that the rich will continue becoming richer at the expense of those who worked hard to put them where they are.