About to sink even further, very quickly, I’ll wager
US has regressed to developing nation status, MIT economist warns
Peter
Temin says 80 per cent of the population is burdened with debt and
anxious about job security
21
April, 2017
America
is regressing to have the economic and political structure of a
developing nation, an MIT economist has warned.
Peter
Temin says the world's’ largest economy has roads and bridges that
look more like those in Thailand and Venezuela than those in parts of
Europe.
In
his new book, “The Vanishing Middle Class", reviewed by the
Institute for New Economic Thinking, Mr Temin says the fracture of US
society is leading the middle class to disappear.
The
economist describes a two-track economy with on the one hand 20 per
cent of the population that is educated and enjoys good jobs and
supportive social networks.
On
the other hand, the remaining 80 per cent, he said, are part of the
US’ low-wage sector, where the world of possibility has shrunk and
people are burdened with debts and anxious about job security.
Mr
Temin used a model, which was created by Nobel Prize winner Arthur
Lewis and designed to understand developing nations, to describe how
far inequalities have progressed in the US.
When
applied to the US, Mr Temin said that “the Lewis model actually
works”.
He
found that much of the low-wage sector had little influence over
public policy, the high-income sector was keeping wages down to
provide cheap labour, social control was used to prevent subsistence
workers from challenging existing policies and social mobility was
low.
Mr
Temin also claims that this dual-economy has a “racist”
undertone.
“The
desire to preserve the inferior status of blacks has motivated
policies against all members of the low-wage sector.
“We
have a structure that predetermines winners and losers. We are not
getting the benefits of all the people who could contribute to the
growth of the economy, to advances in medicine or science which could
improve the quality of life for everyone — including some of the
rich people," he writes.
Commenting
on Mr Temin’s findings, Lynn Parramore, senior research analyst at
the Institute for New Economic Thinking, writes: “Without a robust
middle class, America is not only reverting to developing-country
status, it is increasingly ripe for serious social turmoil that has
not been seen in generations.”
Mr
Temin says that education is the solution to offer everyone in
society better opportunities and calls for investments in public
schools and public universities.
He
says: “Knowing how to think, how to get on with people, how to
cooperate. All the social skills and social capital … [are] going
to be critically important for kids in this environment."
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