Who had it better:
Our parents or us?
Much adieu was made
this week about the U.S. population crossing the 300 million mark on
Tuesday, Oct. 17. The latest report from the U.S. Census Bureau
sparked a flood of news articles on the population debate and not a
few discussions on how our present standard of living has changed
over the years.
One well-known
publication made this statement in response to the census report:
"[T]he typical family is doing a whole lot better than their
grandparents were in 1967, the year the population first surpassed
200 million." This statement was made in a Forbes.com article
which appeared recently on Internet news wires around the country.
The article went on to tout the incredible level of economic
prosperity our generation enjoys compared to the generation 40 years
prior. It was entitled "The Average American: 1967 and
Today" and was written to convince today’s younger generation
that they’ve never had it so good and should stop their grumbling
and be happy about their economic lot. Problem was, the article was
extremely superficial and just barely scratched the surface of all
the major economic influences that determine whether our current
standard of living is higher than that of our parents’ and
grandparents’ generation. In other words, it was a propaganda
piece in the truest sense.
The Forbes article
recognized that there is currently a high level of dissatisfaction
among Americans of all ages over their economic lot, principally
those in the 25-35 year-old category. As one example, a recent poll
found that 22% of U.S. respondents said they had little or nothing
left over at the end of the month after paying their bills. Another
poll in Parade Magazine found that 48% of Americans believe
they’re worse off than their parents were (a survey cited in the
Forbes article). Also, a study by the GFK-Roper group revealed that
66% of Americans said that their personal situation in the
"golden years" of 1950-1980 was better than it is today.
There is a general
feeling among countless Americans today that our economic plight is
a perilous one compared to that of previous generations. Indeed, as
evidenced by the explosive growth in the psychic and fortune telling
industry, a growing percentage of Americans are worried about what
the future holds for them, especially as it pertains to their
financial condition.
So along come our
friends at Forbes to assure us that our take on our economic plight
compared to that of our parents’ is wrong – things aren’t
nearly as bad as they seem! After reading one blanket generalization
after another I was left with a feeling that my intelligence had
just been insulted by the folks at Forbes. Let me share with you
some of the more outrageous assertions made in this article.
Forbes starts by
noting that "Mr. And Mrs. Median’s" annual income today
is $46,326, which is 32% higher than that of 40 years ago "even
when adjusted for inflation." The article also points out that
average American household worth is $465,970, or 83% higher compared
to 1965.
Right here is where
the Forbes article made its first error. The assumption is that the
average American is a homeowner. In fact, most Americans do not own
their own homes in the true sense of the word. They either rent, or
in the case of those with houses of their own, they have a long-term
mortgage. Until the mortgage is paid off they can’t truly claim
ownership. Even if the value of their home has increased relative
from when they first bought it, they don’t realize a profit until
they actually sell. Then there is the tendency for mortgage owners
to take out loans against their mortgage, thereby going deeper into
debt. This is an illusory measure of wealth since the money isn’t
truly theirs.
But along with home
ownership comes greater financial responsibility. Forbes doesn’t
mention that property tax rates have increased manifold over the
last 40 years. In some parts of the country, notably along the coast
of the Southeastern U.S., property tax rates have risen in excess of
100% in just the last 3-4 years alone! This also doesn’t take into
account higher property insurance rates in light of extreme weather
trends in recent years.
Forbes also talks
about cheaper airline travel being one of the hallmarks of our
generation compared to 40 years ago. I would disagree with this. If
one factors into the equation the opportunity costs of having to
wait those extra hours before actually boarding the plane (for
baggage, security checks, etc.) not to mention the increase in
destination times due to the decrease in direct flights, we’re
paying more for airline travel than our parents did, as well.
But it’s not only
the big things that make our lives so expensive compared with those
of our parents, it’s the little things as well. And the
"little things" tend to add up over time a lot more than
Forbes assumes.
Take the average
telephone bill for instance. In the "good old days" our
parents paid a mere fraction of what we’re paying in the average
month for the "privilege" of having a telephone. I
emphasize "privilege" since that’s apparently what the
phone company considers it. Roughly 80-85% of any given telephone
bill is comprised of taxes – local, state and federal taxes...even
so-called "universal" taxes! There are hidden fees and
surtaxes (taxes on top of taxes) and each year it increases without
fail. One recent analysis found that a customer of a major U.S.
phone company had an average monthly bill of $70 when the bill
should have been closer to $20-$25 based on calls and basic service
fees alone! So at the end of each month this person was at least $50
poorer than his parents were 40 years earlier.
One topic which the
Forbes article fails to adequately cover is today’s level of
overall taxation compared with that of 40 years ago. There’s no
other way of saying it: today’s tax rates are fierce compared to
the taxation our parents were subjected to. We’re not just talking
federal, state and local taxes, either. We’re talking surtaxes –
hidden taxes and taxes on top of taxes on top of taxes. We’re also
talking about indirect taxes that may not technically fall under the
government tax category but which nonetheless qualify as a tax since
most of us can’t avoid paying it. These stealth taxes can be found
in everything from the cost of a gallon of gasoline, to a loaf of
bread, to the cost of medical care. More perniciously they take the
form of insurance costs. Health- and medical-related costs alone
have skyrocketed in recent years thanks to the growth and increasing
political power of the insurance industry. The cost of doing
business for the average U.S. business has also increased
significantly over the last 40 years in terms of local, state and
federal taxes. These combined taxes are setbacks our parents
didn’t have to contend with, at least not to the degree that
exists today.
Forbes tried to
whitewash the discontent the median American feels today by
attributing it to an economic theory of the establishment economist
Milton Friedman. He called it "Permanent Income Theory,"
which assumes economic actors measure their current incomes compared
to what they expected to earn a few years ago. In other words, they
don’t consider what the average income was 40 years ago –
they’re only concerned with the here-and-now. While there may be
some truth in that statement, there is far greater evidence to
support the "grumpiness" of the average American from the
actual loss of income due to higher rates of taxation and costs of
living.
One area that Forbes
briefly touched on that actually comes closer to the truth is the
"winner take all" phenomenon. This is something that is
unique to our generation and something our parents didn’t have to
deal with. This phenomenon is discussed at length in the modern
classic, "Winner Take All Society" written by the
economists Robert Frank and Philip Cook. Briefly stated, the
winner-take-all economy is characterized by only a relative handful
of men and women dominating the highest places in any given economic
area, including sports and entertainment, with the top participants
commanding huge salaries and leaving everyone else competing for the
crumbs. As the authors illustrate, this phenomenon was relatively
unknown in our grandparents’ generation and to a lesser degree in
our parents’ generation. It has accelerated especially since the
1980s.
Forbes at least
acknowledged this in passing by observing that "people
generally judge their fortunes not in absolute terms, but by
comparing themselves to others, the super-success of the top 1% can
make Mr. And Mrs. Median feel relatively poor." Forbes cites as
an example golfer Tiger Woods making $87 million last year while a
top athlete of the 1960s, Joe Namath, made only $142,000 a year in
his day. Indeed, the winner-take-all phenomenon of our time only
serves to increase feelings of dissatisfaction among the median.
Along with the
winner-take-all phenomenon of our generation comes the corollary of
economic fusion. The rich have not only become richer, leaving
relatively less for the rest to compete for, but industries have
merged and consolidated on a level that was unseen in our parents’
time. In our parents’ and grandparents’ day, "trust
busting" was the operative word as the government was urged to
break down monopolies where they existed and prevent them from
arising and threatening consumers. Today, just the opposite trend is
in force. Monopolies and oligopolies are actually encouraged by the
government and supported at every turn. This has led to the rise of
the super-corporate state with U.S.-based multinational companies
such as Wal Mart dominating entire industries where once competition
among hundreds of competitors reigned supreme.
The Forbes article
tries to make the reader believe that the growing income disparity
between the elite and the median is a good thing, and that the elite
haven’t abused their growing economic consolidation by raising
prices to consumers. But as we’ve seen in too many instances
already, this is a far cry from the truth. An analysis of how Big
Business operates is beyond the scope of this commentary. But to
give one example, the business model used by Wal Mart for dominating
the retail industry involves circumventing a variety of local, state
and federal laws and is paid for by the taxpayers of whatever town
Wal Mart has invaded in many ways. Money earned by Wal Mart and
similar Big Businesses is funneled directly to overseas economies
instead of being re-invested into the local economy, thereby
rendering the median worse off.
Forbes also points
out that the growth of the Internet and other forms of advanced
communications make it easier for us to hear all about how the elite
are making a lot more than everyone else. This is another major
economic factor that few have dedicated much thought to. The
Internet is a powerful tool for both good and evil. It can be used
as a tool for propaganda for one thing – such as the Forbes
article presently under discussion – but it can also be used to
disseminate useful information.
In many ways the
life our parents’ and grandparents’ enjoyed was much simpler,
and sometimes simple is better. Our parents certainly never enjoyed
the degree of communications we do today. But with advanced
communications comes advanced opportunities for abuse. The Internet,
cable T.V., and other forms of popular media and electronic
entertainment have been used extensively by the elite to foster the
mass consumer culture we have today. These technologies have been
widely hailed as examples of modern luxury and convenience. But
every time the average American turns on commercial television or
surfs the Internet he is bombarded with a variety of advertisements
– both overt and subliminal – enticing him to "buy, buy,
buy" and go further into debt. Since most of the items offered
up for sale through the mass media are frivolous in nature (i.e.,
something we can all do without) it doesn’t take much analysis to
realize how far down the path toward debt slavery our generation has
been carried compared to our parents’ generation. I would argue
that the explosion in advertising and commercialism is another
hidden cost to our generation that renders us less better off than
our parents. In other words, the modern "luxuries" of
Internet and T.V. mainly serve to widen the yawning chasm between
the elites and the median.
Lest anyone still
needs some "cheering up," Forbes offers this parting
observation: "When Lyndon Johnson occupied the White House in
1965, he earned $100,000 a year, or 14 times what the Medians
earned. This year, George W. Bush will earn $400,000, or just eight
times the Medians." This statement is laughable since it has
been proven that every U.S. president since Johnson has left the
White House several millions richer than when he first entered.
Forbes has obviously overlooked the under-the-table deals and slush
funds that are (unofficially) part of every presidential pay
package.
Despite the claims
made in the Forbes article, a careful analysis of longer-term U.S.
economic trends shows that our generation is definitely *not* better
off than the generation of 40 years ago, on balance. Back then,
Americans actually had savings while today the average American is
only a couple of paychecks away from the street. Consumer debt has
exploded to staggering levels and this can be at least partly blamed
on the mass consumer culture created by the mainstream media. The
modern banking establishment also shares much of the blame. What
then can be done?
Dr. Stuart Crane
used to always share with his audience members in his economic
lectures back in the ‘70s and ‘80s his personal secret to
becoming rich. The advice he dispensed is well worth repeating. To
begin with, he said, one must avoid all forms of debt much as you
would the plague. *All* forms of debt! Secondly, the prospective
rich person must live on half his income. Notice what he said:
*half* of one’s income. He said this meant that what you made in
your job or business at the end of each month must be used to pay
for only the basic necessities and the remaining half would be saved
and invested. Invariably, some member of the audience would protest,
"But what if I can’t afford to make my house payment on half
my income?" His response was that the person must sell his home
and buy or rent a cheaper one. "But what if I can’t afford
this or that?" "Then you’ll just have to do without this
or that (fill in the blank) until you can afford it," was his
response.
Crane maintained
that if you adhered to this basic rule of avoiding debt and living
on half your income that one couldn’t help but becoming wealthy
over time. He also pointed out that as your income rose, so would
your standard of living, i.e., the 50% rule would still apply but
you’d still be living better than you were a few years earlier.
Often his audience members would ask, "But what should I invest
the remaining 50% of my money in?" His response was that it
didn’t matter what you invested in since you’d be using only a
certain part of your discretionary income. If you bombed out on one
investment you’d eventually come back on another one. His system
is a beautiful testimony to the law of averages, and he was
absolutely right!
A strict adherence
to Dr. Cranes method of becoming rich would mean that many Americans
would have to forego such amenities as cable television, dining at
nice restaurants and perhaps even more conveniences that were
previously thought to be indispensable. But as Crane pointed out,
"Many of the things we take for granted and assume we can’t
live without are actually not really necessary at all. You’d be
surprised how much you can get by without when you really try."
The problem
underlying the growing discontent of the average American in this
modern winner-take-all society is that he doesn’t think in terms
of "getting by." Such a proposition is unthinkable to
most. But as Crane points out, "getting by" is sometimes
absolutely essential before you can really start to prosper in
economic terms. An interesting by-product of the Crane method,
however, is that it leaves the elitist-controlled corporate state
out in the cold, which is something they hope and pray the average
American never considers doing. Here’s hoping more Americans give
some serious thought to the advice of Dr. Crane!
Novelist Ayn Rand
once wrote a famous book entitled "Atlas Shrugged." In it
she posed a hypothetical scenario in which the super industrialists
of the country decided to shut down their factories and retreat from
society, abandoning entire industries and leaving mass unemployment
and economic chaos in their wake. In her vision, the great captains
of industry and super wealthy elites were the collective
"Atlas" without which the country would collapse.
Rand had it
backwards. Atlas isn’t the super elites, it’s the collective
backbone of the working middle class, or the "median" if
you will. They are the ones whose energies and productive efforts
translate into wealth for all, and without them even the elites
would have no one to sell their merchandise to. As I argued in a
recent article, production has always been the true money standard
of any country and the middle class is the engine behind that
production. Without them, the economy would retreat drastically and
the American standard of living would decline.
What would happen to
this country and its economy if "Atlas" (the middle class)
truly shrugged? When the level of taxation becomes so onerous as to
be unbearable to the "median," when mortgage and debt
levels expand beyond belief, when the basic costs of living
increases beyond the breaking point -- how will the average American
react? The elites are banking on their belief that the average
American will turn to the corporate state in his time of trouble, as
he always has, and look for relief.
But what if next
time is different? Will Atlas shrug off this heavy burden and simply
turn his back on the American way of life, retreating from the
cities and leaving the establishment elite to their own devices?
Will the median American simply "drop out" of society (as
the hippies experimented with in the ‘60s and ‘70s and as was
briefly tried by some during the early ‘90s recession)? When the
economic axe falls between 2010-2012 from the crashing 120-year
cycle, will America as we know it come to an end? These questions
for now remain unanswered but one thing is certain: things have
never been as they are today and our generation has many more
obstacles and challenges ahead of us than our parents ever had to
face. It remains to us to make the right choices.
Clif Droke is the
editor of the 3-times weekly Momentum Strategies Report which covers
U.S. equities and forecasts individual stocks, short- and
intermediate-term, using unique proprietary analytical methods and
Federal Reserve securities lending analysis. He is also the
author of numerous books, including most recently "Turnaround
Trading & Investing." Visit his web site at www.clifdroke.com