Twenty good years in Oregon. . . for the rich

Chuck Sheketoff

The last two decades have been good years in Oregon, for the rich.

A study released today found that, between the late 1980s and the middle of this decade (similar points in the business cycles), the richest fifth of families in Oregon saw their incomes increase 46.2%, or $2,364 per year. Middle income families saw their incomes increase only 8.3% or only $216 per year. Low income families had no income gains.

The growth in the gap between the income of the richest and middle-income families in Oregon was the second highest in the nation. The growth in the gap between the richest and the poorest of families in Oregon grew at the 11th fastest pace among all states over the same two decade span.

The study, Pulling Apart: A State-by-State Analysis of Income Trends, was conducted jointly by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and the Economic Policy Institute.

OCPP's news release provides a summary of the study's findings for Oregon, plus some additional information about inequality growth in Oregon over the last two decades and links to the full report, the Oregon fact sheet, and the national news release.

Read and discuss.

  • Gary (unverified)
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    I agree that incomes for the middle class and upper class have probably gained that much percentage-wise, but I think the money numbers have to be wrong. How could 46.2% of the top 20%ers be $2,364? That would mean they only make $5000 or so a year? And I am probably in the middle income bracket, but I know 8.3% of my income is much more than $216. I think you guys need to check your numbers.

  • David McDonald (unverified)
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    This information should come as a surprise to no one. While our poorest citizens have struggled simply to survive, the wealthy in our state have been cruising along quite nicely.

    I believe it's because of a legislature more focussed on their own careers than on the people who elected them in the first place. That's progressive Oregon for ya...

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    You really need to dowload the actual study because, as Gary points out above, Chuck screwed up the numbers in his post.

    The study itself gives some informative data providing insight into how the economy has changed over the past two decades and how different regions have been affected. Of course, the authors of the study tend to attribute all change to government policie since, as everyone knows, government is all powerful and the global economy is a myth.

    The study also appears to perpetuate the common misconception that people who were in the top 20% in the late 1980s or late 1990s are the same people who sre in the top 20% today. Upward mobility, apparently, is another myth.

    Finally, the report indicates that the greatest spurt in growth of disparity between the middle class and upper class in Oregon occured between the late 1980s and the late 1990s, not more recently. That suggests a lot of it is attributable to the high tech and "dot com" boom of the 1990s.

    Presumably, we would all have been better off if Oregon hadn't participated in the "Clinton prosperity." Better that no one get rich than that only some people get rich.

  • SDL (unverified)
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    I believe it's because of a legislature more focussed on their own careers than on the people who elected them in the first place. That's progressive Oregon for ya...

    Actually, and with all seriousness, I think it's the "progressive" community in Oregon itself, or at least the segment that make themselves visible on places on BO, the DPO, vanity efforts like the Bus Project (that says nothing about the sincere volunteers by the way), and the peculiarly ineffectual Oregon chapters of many national groups, that are too blame. When you have a Democratic Party and substantial numbers of people from the aforementioned quarters defending really mediocre leaders like Kulongoski, Wyden, Hooley Merkley, Bates, Westlund, and even Kitzhaber (not to mention real dullards like MacPherson, Koger, Bradbury and the like), just to name a few who have been vociferously defended in what I've read here in the last few days, as the "best" instead of apologizing to the world for the failure of the leaders we pick to defend the old Democrat values of standing up for working people, you know we have a big, big problem.

    Of course, one just has to read the really marginal intellectual quality of the defenses offered, and how it mainly turns on the obviously immature mental faculties and egotism of the writer --- as in "I like them, so you should recognize that is all that matters" --- and it all becomes clear.

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    Jack and Gary accuse me of reading the study wrong...when in fact they are misreading what I wrote. The change in income in dollars is the per year change; the percent change is the change over the 20 years.

    I will not waste time with Jack's hyperbolic criticisms of the report, such as his claim that the authors ignore mobility (see page 46 of the report).

    And while it might be refreshing that Jack has acknowledged the "Clinton prosperity," his sarcasm hides that he ignores our call for "more broadly shared prosperity" and policies that support opportunity for more Oregonians.

    Once again Jack is shooting misguided arrows while refusing to acknowledge a problem.

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    It continues to trickle down over all of us here in Oregon...

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    I've become more inured to these kinds of statistics over the years. The poor vastly outnumber the rich. They could vote and change this overnight if they wanted to. But by supporting Republicans, they clearly show they don't. They're far more concerned with "getting into heaven" by exhibiting hatred for gays, feminists, atheists, Muslims (many who themselves hate gays, feminists, and atheists), Mexicans, and all sorts of other scapegoats of the day.

    The American poor have made their own bed. Let them lie in it.

  • Jonathan Radmacher (unverified)
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    This post, and the study, are being used to prove something they don't prove. That's not to say the "gap" isn't important, but it doesn't prove the change in income statistics.

    The study compares the populous by looking at their relative income in the year studied. The study therefore does not seem to account for the fact that people may well have moved here during that time span, and earned a high income. If high-paying jobs are created, and people move to Oregon to take those jobs, then it will effect this kind of snapshot statistical analysis. By contrast, to prove that someone's income is actually increasing or decreasing, one would need to take a sample of people, and study how their particular incomes changed in 20 years.

  • murphy (unverified)
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    So SDL thinks Oregon is infested with “really mediocre leaders.” Well, fine – if you don’t like them, then convince the moribund Republican party in Oregon to stop nominating knuckle-dragging wing nuts for statewide offices.

    When given the choice between “really mediocre leaders” and right-wing lunatics, we’ll go with the former every time.

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    It seems to me that Jonathan, Jack, and other critics are demanding a level of analysis that's impossible to achieve.

    Either you study the population at large, or you track every single individual in the state (or at least a huge statistical sample) over decades to determine each person's financial status.

    The latter is clearly not plausible, so studying large population groups is the only option. Which, yes, will leave out some minor richness of detail -- but the overall numbers here are so huge, I don't think it really matters.

    Yes, some people rapidly scamper from the bottom rung to the top. Yes, some people move into the state with high paying jobs. (And yes, some people move into the state with very low paying jobs.)

    But all of that is a minor effect as compared to the overall picture here.

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    The American poor have made their own bed. Let them lie in it.

    Sort of a messed-up elitist point of view considering that party identification for those with incomes under $20K was 43%D/18%R (according to a 2004 Pew study) with the D number decreasing and the R number increasing until they swap in the $50K+ range. Not only that, but the ethnic groups that you blame "the poor" for hating have lower household incomes than the national average and are more likely to vote Democratic.

  • Ralph (unverified)
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    Chuck, we get it already, you hate rich people. Go ahead and move to Cuba, we won't miss you. Really, move already, we're tired of your "johnny one note" posts. Most of the time your're too stupid to even get your data correct. Guess that is what happens when a lawyer with an agenda pretends to be an economist.

  • Fair and Balanced (unverified)
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    The OCPP makes an outstanding contribution to our understanding of how the system really works. Thanks for this post, Chuck.

    I agree that the numbers are somewhat persuasive and that decades of poor oversight and inadequate regulation of corporate elites have enabled a massive transfer of wealth to them, which needs to be addressed. But to really understand what's going on, there needs to be some analysis of certain demographic cohorts - age and income groups. Demographic changes, such as migration and the aging Baby Boomers, can create massive shifts in averages, masking how well people are faring at various levels.

    The Democrats need to be very careful how they address this. Public and private pension funds are heavily invested in Corporate America (a very clever strategy by the capitalists when you think about it), kind of like taking us all hostage. Any action that threatens their profitability also threatens the nest eggs of millions of lower and middle income working people. We need a strategy that reins in the abuses (environmental, outsourcing, etc.) and curbs executive looting without victimizing the hostages.

    Just a word about a possible strategy of raising capital gains taxes. A more efficient approach would be to tax only windfall profits by exempting inflationary gains from tax and raising the tax rate substantially and progressively on gains exceeding inflation.

    Let's be smart about how we approach this problem, but let's get moving on it soon.

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    Why would you track individuals when the aggregate is a more powerful source of information? It doesn't matter who's doing the earning in particular; it's how the very large groups of income strata compare over time.

    Hmm...if we make our tax structure less progressive, specifically giving earners at the top a massive set of tax breaks, how could it EVER happen that those at the top end up doing disproportionately better than everyone else? I mean, the last time we cut taxes at the top substantially was the 80s, and income disparity didn't become a problem during that...oh, heh, nevermind.

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    They don't vote darrel. There is a 29% difference between the turnout for the lowest quintile (51.4%) and the highest (80.4%) in terms of voting percentage. If you add in the second highest (GOP leaning) quintile, which votes at 75.6%, you can see why the poor and working class always seem to get screwed.

    Further, while in, say, the 2000 election, the lowest income voters did indeed vote Democratic at 62%, that dropped off dramatically for just the next level up: 51%. And the middle class voted Republican. Get even the smallest amount of food in people's bellies and hate becomes much more important to them.

  • Amiel Handelsman (unverified)
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    As revealing as we might find this data, it is worth considering - as many here know - that an even more robust financial measure of prosperity today and possibility (e.g. for one's children) tomorrow is wealth, not income. In the mid 90s a book called Black Wealth, White Wealth helped me see this distinction. The two authors, one white, one African American, both had followed similar career trajectories and earned almost identical incomes, yet had very different capacities to provide for their families. The major reason? They had dramatically different levels of financial assets that largely stemmed from what, if anything, they had inherited plus whether they had had access to housing appreciation or were shut out due to redlining. Their book showed how people with identical incomes (even middle class) could have dramatically different levels of prosperity due to assets. And this is not just about race. As one of the coauthors, Melvin Oliver, said when I saw him speak, "I came in through the door of race and went out through the door of assets."

    So when I see the data Chuck provides, I ask: 1. What about assets? 2. If we could measure wealth differences and track this over time (yeah, impossible, I know), would this change what policies we advocated for? Obviously, this leads us to multimillionaire inheritances - which amputate the American work ethic, create mini-kingdoms, and set a poor example for our children - but what else?

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    Get even the smallest amount of food in people's bellies and hate becomes much more important to them.

    That's a big step from claiming that the poor are so full of hate ("for gays, feminists, atheists, Muslims," etc.) that they support Republicans. Which is what you said the first time around:

    But by supporting Republicans, they [the poor] clearly show they don't [want change].

    Your first comment condemned the poor for their record of supporting Republicans (when, in fact those who voted were more solidly Democratic than any other economic group group of voters) and now you're saying that it's the non-poor who are the haters.

    A far cry from your original "Let them eat cake."

  • Terry Parker (unverified)
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    Even with an income increase of a meager 8.3 percent, the middle class in actuality is loosing ground due to the legislature’s greed to increase taxes and fees that far exceed the $216 per year middle income wage earners have gained. When increases in property taxes and tax levies are calculated in, the taxes the middle class now must pay contribute just as much to the looming recession as do high energy and food prices.

  • (Show?)
    <h1>1 Even the 30% support for Republicans among the extremely poor is too much.</h1> <h1>2 Not voting to defeat the GOP may only be half as bad as voting GOP, but it's still bad.</h1> <h1>3 I count among the "poor" the struggling lower middle class - the next to lowest quintile who've lost the most ground over the last 20 years. And who support the Republicans nearly evenly with Democrats.</h1> <h1>4 And while I didn't say "let them eat cake", the poor and working poor are going to eat nothing so long as a sizable percentage of them care more about their hate than their own economic well being. That's simply the facts.</h1>
  • David McDonald (unverified)
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    Hey Ralph, when you tell Chuck "WE won't miss you" are you speaking of the rich who don't want this info. out there, or conservatives pretending they're not conservative?

  • Miles (unverified)
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    I'm interested to hear more from those who think that public policy is the main, or even a sizable, cause of the growing income disparity. What is the government doing that exacerbates the problem? I tend to think that public policy can have a small impact in either direction, but the cause is much larger than that. Globalization and the move towards a knowledge-based economy are leaving people behind.

    On a related note, Steve, what is it that the Democrats would do for the poor if they supported us in greater numbers? The party has some marginal programs that might help -- like better primary and secondary education, an increase in pell grants, and universal health care -- but nothing that can compete with the global market forces at work here.

  • Fair and Balanced (unverified)
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    Miles, it's what the government is NOT doing.

    • no economic development strategy
    • no energy policy
    • not regulating monopolistic practices (enough)
    • not policing corporate misconduct
    • not ensuring quality education
    • not planning for the time when gasoline is $20 a gallon (coming soon to a station near you) by encouraging public transit, passenger rail, compact development, etc.

    Stuff like that.

  • Chris Corbell (unverified)
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    I'm dubious about the data - I don't care as much about how the top 1% are doing as how much opportunity exists for everyone else. I was able to get out of poverty into a great middle-class career during this period; how many others were able to do the same? (And how many more moved here from even more depressed economic areas, keeping low income flat)? If my middle class salary isn't as much higher compared to someone's middle class salary in the 80's, as a billionaire's is to a millionaire's, who cares? The point is to get people out of poverty.

    The recommendations are good though:

    Leachman called for policies that produce more broadly shared prosperity, including basing Oregon’s tax system more on ability to pay.
    Additionally, Leachman said that lawmakers should enact policies that promote opportunity, such as expanded job training, worker-friendly leave and child care policies, a more affordable higher education system and a health care system that is more accessible to all Oregonians.

    I think we can agree on that and have a better chance of pushing such policies without resorting to class warfare rhetoric about how the trend of the top 1% is "tearing our social fabric and threatening our democracy."

    Some very interesting economic modeling has shown that widening of wealth gaps is an emergent property dynamic systems with a minimal of free individual behavior. This means that classical economics is wrong; the market by itself does not magically achieve the best, most efficient result. But it also means that those who demonize the wealthy are wrong; it's a structural problem we can address by growth, fair taxes and public infrastructure, not by vilification of wealth and demagogic hyperbole.

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    And while I didn't say "let them eat cake", the poor and working poor are going to eat nothing so long as a sizable percentage of them care more about their hate than their own economic well being.

    Again with the hate.

    What about your hate? "The American poor have made their own bed. Let them lie in it."

    You keep falling back into this supposition that the poor are somehow more full of hate than anyone else. When they run into people with attitudes like yours -- on either side of the political fence -- do you really wonder why so many could care less about politics? And when politicians of both parties do something like, say, let a city drown and then decay because they couldn't be bothered to allocate enough money to keep the levees up to snuff as just the latest in decades of infrastructure neglect, is it any surprise that poor people don't really expect anyone to look out for them?

  • Mara (unverified)
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    I'm interested in hearing more on what policies people think we should pursue to help us address inequalities. Where do we go from here?

    For those interested in equity issues in the Portland metro region, the Regional Equity Atlas measures access to opportunities like affordable housing, transit, parks and grocery stores. It's a good tool to help us see how we're doing as a region.

    note/ shameless plug:

    I work for the The Coalition for a Livable Future, which published the Equity Atlas in conjunction with PSU. We're hosting the Regional Livability Summit in May and our main focus is to look at strategies to address equity. All are welcome at the Summit.

  • (Show?)

    I didn't say "more full of hate than anyone else". You like to put words in people's mouths. But clearly, hate is present at lower income levels, because it really is the only way to explain why there is any support at all for the GOP at that level.

    Let me ask you a question, darrel. If you discovered that 30% of the black population was voting for the KKK, what would you make of it? There would have to be a rather significant reason for people to vote that way don't you think?

    I occasionally meet people while canvassing that I would think could never vote GOP. Yet they do. And usually it's because they have some Neanderthalic societal views they think the Democrats threaten.

    Worse, I've seen people who demand their rights as Democrats, act like Republicans towards everyone else. I've met Union members who hate gays, blacks who both complain about racism and yet really do use the word 'bitches' to describe all women, Log cabin Republicans who simultaneously complain Democrats don't protect them and want to slash taxes. And while I argue with them, it rarely comes to much.

    So I do what I can and move on. And no longer waste my pity on people who seem determined to harm their own self interest.

  • Jonathan Radmacher (unverified)
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    Kari:

    You really think this is the best study that can be done? Seriously? There are decade-old studies on tons of issues that are more detailed and hidden than income (e.g. from yesterday's paper, whether women with a 36 inch waste line are more likely to die). I suspect a researcher could even do a retrospective study, i.e. find an appropriate sampling of people, and survey how their particular incomes have changed over the past 20 years.

    A much better measure/study of economic disparity is measuring poverty rates. I believe Oregon has improved a little, but is still in miserable shape. That kind of discussion doesn't pit rich against poor, but instead asks what can be done to benefit the most economically needy people. If nothing else, the comments on this post prove the point -- rich vs. poor debates are not a particularly effective way of getting everyone to talk about policies. And the harshness of discussion is exacerbated when the "statistics" being used don't prove the point made.

  • David McDonald (unverified)
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    The idea that this is a Republican vs. Democrat problem seems a bit naive to me. It's a mindset problem.

    Who are these wealthy people? Mostly white males who had rights and priveledges handed to them. Most of them had wealthy white male heads of their households growing up.

    And who are the poor? People of color, white folks who grew up on the "wrong side of the tracks", single parents who chose the wrong partner, and people with disabilities.

    Good education and opportunity are hard to come by when it's mainly reserved for a chosen group. Then you have corporate media (run by who?) filling these people's heads with lies about how it all works.

    Let's not make believe it's anything more than government controling the masses. It's been going on since the beginning of time.

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    Jack and Gary accuse me of reading the study wrong...when in fact they are misreading what I wrote. The change in income in dollars is the per year change; the percent change is the change over the 20 years.

    Actually, Chuck, I didn't accuse you of misreading the report. I accused you of "screwing up the numbers" in your post, which I believe you did by the confusing use of "per year" to refer to the annual increase in income each year rather than the increase in annual income per year over the reporting period.

    I will not waste time with Jack's hyperbolic criticisms of the report, such as his claim that the authors ignore mobility (see page 46 of the report).

    I never said the authors ignore mobility. I said the study "appears to perpetuate the common misconception that people who were in the top 20% in the late 1980s or late 1990s are the same people who are in the top 20% today. Upward mobility, apparently, is another myth."

    I stand by that, since your reference to page 46 in the report only discusses their allegation regarding lack of upward mobility among low-income families, not from middle- to upper-income, which is where most of the upward mobility exists in our society.

    Finally, despite your attack on my "hyperbole," I really didn't attack the study overall and in fact suggested that people download it and read the actual study rather than their polemic. I happen to think family income inequality is an important issue, although I believe that social and economic forces are far more responsible for it than government policies and I think we need to be careful before rushing to embrace knee-jerk policy prescriptions to "remedy" the problem.

    Unfortunately, Chuck, in the "us v. them" world you inhabit, there seems to be no place for measured analysis and discussion.

  • LT (unverified)
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    Jack, while there is upward mobility, there is also downward mobility---people doing well in the 1990s are not necessarily doing well now. A layoff, huge medical bills, moving for a better job and not being able to sell their old home (esp. in a depressed area like Jackson County) all can contribute to people who were once secure financially being worried/scared about their financial stability.

    And yet, over recent years the Republicans have been the party of "tax cuts solve all problems".

    There has been talk among Republicans I know about "restoring the brand"---there was a time when Republicans were the dominant party in this state. But that was back in the days of Hatfield, McCall, Paulus, Clay Myers, etc---people who probably couldn't win a primary in today's Republican party where anti-government, tax cutting, slamming public employee unions, rhetoric like "we must have spending discipline but don't ask for specifics of budget cuts".

    There are some common sense Republicans beginning to become well known. Mike Huckabee's views on education (regardless of what you think of his views on anything else) would have led Minnis, Scott, Richardson et al to brand him as some kind of "liberal". So why was he the last candidate standing outside of McCain?

    St.Sen. Frank Morse is admired by people who used to be Republicans but either got fed up or were told by the dominant faction around the time McCall died that they didn't belong in the GOP, aka "we don't want your kind".

    Huckabee talked about small town folks and the problems they face--something the GOP hasn't discussed for years.

    It is going to be interesting to watch this year and see what happens with these issues. If someone brings up income disparity (incl. people working part time who would like to be working full time but can only find part time work) and a Republican (candidate or activist) begins an answer with "But the Democrats..." they will deserve scorn. From late 2000 (remember the chants of "he won, get over it!") until election night 2006, Republicans were in control of this country, and blaming Democrats is not likely to win over people who are not strong partisans but are either in financial difficulty or know someone who is.

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    I occasionally meet people while canvassing that I would think could never vote GOP. Yet they do.

    Steve, I can't understand why anyone would vote for the Republicans. I can't understand why anyone thought George W. Bush would be a competent president.

    But I do know that some people in the top quintile are also driven by "Neanderthalic societal views they think the Democrats threaten." They're the ones listening to Rush Limbaugh and planning to register as Democrats to vote in the Oregon primary election. They're the ones who pay a fraction of the federal income tax rate they would have paid in the 1960s. They're the ones who will suffer the least (as a group) in an economic downturn. But that doesn't mean they won't be affected by the downturn, which is only going to be exacerbated by a war I still can't understand why anybody supported or thought was backed up by credible evidence enough to vote for.

  • Gary (unverified)
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    Chuck has taken issue with me over the fact that his numbers are wrong. I don't disagree with what his article is saying, but THE NUMBERS DON'T MAKE SENSE! So then Chuck has the nerve to e-mail me and try to explain himself, even though he obviously needs to learn how to write as well as do math in his head, because anyone with a 3rd grade education can figure out that 46% of the top 20% income bracket PER YEAR is not $2300. That would mean that the top 20% income bracket would make somewhere around $5000 a year....duh. Get a life Chuck.

  • David McDonald (unverified)
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    I have to wonder how many degrees in rhetoric are represented here. Argument seems to be more important than truth.

  • Katy (unverified)
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    After reading through these comments (and so many comments lately) I'm surprised people still put themselves out there and post on BlueOregon anymore. You people are harsh.

  • Rose Wilde (unverified)
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    Thanks Katy, I wonder where all the progressives are?

    Policies that would help:

    expanding food stamps, medicaid, and welfare/JOBS programs so people who need a little help to become self-sufficient. Currently welfare reform (from 1996, then 2001) kicks people off welfare as soon as they get their first fast food job. we underfund job training in these programs so people don't build long term capacity to care for themselves and their kids.

    fund major child abuse prevention campaigns

    fund drug treatment

    fund public safety efforts to hold domestic violence perpetrators accountable (we don't...)

    massive earned income tax credit expansion coupled with tax reform

    clamping even further down on predatory lending policies

    <h2>funding watchdog and regulatory agencies so we can actually enforce some of our consumer protections</h2>

    and I'm not EVEN a poverty policy expert.

    You know, it's kind of sad for me to say this, but I know a lot of republicans who show more compassion than the poor than I've read above (but I still think they are voting for the wrong people).

  • Terry Parker (unverified)
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    One important thing both parties should do to bring more equity when it comes to income for the middle class is to find compromise by eliminating taxes on capital gains when a person’s total adjusted income is falls within what would be considered a median income bracket or less. Then raise the tax on capital gains for people in the very top percentiles of income. The concept could be designed to be revenue neutral as it relates to taxes collected by the government, would act as an incentive for small investors and also would help protect income erosion for many people that rely on stock dividends to supplement fixed incomes.

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    ...anyone with a 3rd grade education can figure out that 46% of the top 20% income bracket PER YEAR is not $2300. That would mean that the top 20% income bracket would make somewhere around $5000 a year...

    Actually, what Chuck said was that "the richest fifth of families in Oregon saw their incomes increase 46.2%, or $2,364 per year."

    Table 4 of the study says that the dollar value change in the average income of an Oregon household in the top fifth was $40,196, which is $2,364 per year for 17 years (from 1987-1989 to 2004-2006). That $40,196 represents a 46.2% increase in household income for that quintile over the same period of time.

    Table 2 shows the average income for Oregon families in the top fifth: $127,248. If you subtract the increase in average income from that figure, you get $87,052, which is the same number shown for the top quintile household income in Oregon in 1987-1989 in the Appendix Table.

    If you divide $40,196 by $87,052, you get 46.17%, which rounds out to 46.2%, which is the exact figure quoted in the study and by Chuck for the increase in average income in the top 20% of households in Oregon.

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    I'm dubious about the data - I don't care as much about how the top 1% are doing as how much opportunity exists for everyone else. I was able to get out of poverty into a great middle-class career during this period; how many others were able to do the same?

    Well, according to the definition of "quintile", one fifth of the households in America are in the bottom quintile, one fifth are in the second quintile, and so forth. The median household income in Oregon is about $45K. If your household makes more than that you're doing better than at least half of the households in the state.

    Poverty means more than not having much income. The last year my wife and I both worked at Powell's, we made a grand total of $24K. We ate a lot of beans and eggs, we didn't have a car, we were constantly in danger of having our utilities cut off, etc., but we weren't in poverty.

  • Miles (unverified)
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    Rose's ideas are good ones, and I would support them. Making life marginally better for those at the bottom, as Rose suggests, is a good idea, but it won't close the income gap. Similarly, the gap isn't being driven by CEOs giving themselves $50 million bonuses, since the number of people who have the ability to do that is too small to move the overall numbers.

    So why is the top fifth (about $127,000) farther away from the bottom fifth than they were 20 years ago? It seems to me that the income gap is growing due to larger global and societal forces. We're fully immersed in a knowledge-based economy, and if you don't have that knowledge, you aren't going to be able to keep up. Used to be that a high-school grad who was hard-working could do a blue collar job most of his life at a manufacturing plant and be solidly in the middle class. There are very few of those jobs anymore, and due to the oversupply the pay hasn't kept up.

    But if you have knowledge, you're going to do quite well. Take a teacher, which is one of the lowest-paying knowledge-based professions. A family with two teachers with graduate degrees with 10-15 years experience will be pulling in about $100,000 in Portland. 20+ years experience, and they'll be pulling in $120,000, which puts them in the top 5% of all families in Oregon. Not too bad, and the pay only goes up from there for other knowledge-based jobs.

    I think the "solution", which is very long-term, is to give everyone the educational opportunity to participate in the knowledge-based economy. That means much better schools. And since the bell curve is such that not everyone will succeed, it's incumbent upon us to also create a high-level floor (minimum wage, universal health care, social security, etc.) below which no one will fall.

  • Rick Hickey (unverified)
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    Exactly why I am trying to stop Illegal immigration.

    A flood of "will work for anything" peoples in the tens of millions has stagnated wages to the most needy, the working un-educated poor.

    Harvard Prof. of economics - Dr. Howard Borjas( a legal immigrant) just assisted the Arizona case brought on by the ACLU & other ethno-centric groups, to prove that illegals have drastically reduced or staganted wages to the tune of over $1 Billion in lost pay just last year. He & the working people won and AZ. can make companies check the immigration status of workers. Same in Oklahoma. And wages are rising there already!

    Supply & demand is simple, Employer has non stop option of hiring 3rd worlder thrilled to get even min. wage(or under the table for less), employer takes advatange of this supply. If employer had lower supply of workers, especially from countries where $1/hr. is normal, employer would be forced to pay more for limited supply of workers.

    Example; My Black Brother-in-law, factory worker in Salem = $11.90/hr. After Union dues, Insurance & Taxes he brings home not even $400/week, with a Family of 4 to take care of. I made $10/hr. roofing in Bend in 1978. Hello?

    And yes Republicans reducing min. Fed income Tax from 15% to 10% Is a 50% cut for the lowest paid workers and you Democrats want to get rid of that? Democrats such as Jeff Merkley do NOT want employers to hire Americans and pay them well? (He stopped an employer check status bill). Democrats beleive that illegals who are paid under the table or paid low wages pay ANY fed income taxes or ANY state income taxes? And their non English speaking kids @ $12,700 each per year in a Bilingual School is "Good for the economy"? Hello?

    I am sick of American workers suffering and I am doing something about it, why aren't you?

  • (Show?)
    20+ years experience, and they'll be pulling in $120,000, which puts them in the top 5% of all families in Oregon.

    Actually, not.

    $120,000 puts a household not far below the average of the top fifth of households in Oregon, but that's the top 20% not the top 5%. The average income of the Top 5% of Oregon households in 2005 (according to the study cited by Chuck) is just under $220,000. The report doesn't give the boundaries of the income groups, but it's mathematically impossible for a value below the average of the top 20% of incomes to be above the lower boundary of the top 5%.

  • Miles (unverified)
    (Show?)

    My bad, thanks for the correction Darrel. I was thinking "top fifth" but wrote "top 5%."

    <h2>I think the overall point still stands, however, as being in the top 20% is a good place to be. And depending on how much the $127,000 average is skewed upward by the superwealthy, the fictitious two-teacher family is probably close to the top 10%.</h2>

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