Right by Miles
Two teenage boys are in a car chase with a reckless, sexually perverted Polk County sheriff’s deputy. The boys crash, killing Miles White, 16. But the sheriff’s office does not investigate its deputy’s involvement. Why?
Friday Night Rewind It doesn't matter which team you cheer for. We've got video previews of every high school football program in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco and Hernando County.
Fall TV match-ups
The networks try to catch viewers' attention after the writers strike, while cable channels go for a knockout blow by debuting new series at the same time. Let's see who the winners are.
In case you haven't been keeping up with the fortunes of the fortunate, the private jet business is booming. In the first quarter of this year, shipments of private jets were up 41 percent. It seems that servicing America's elite is a thriving niche. There are so many new mega-yachts that owners can't keep them staffed, says the New York Observer.
Now, back on Earth, let's look at how the rest of us are doing. Hmm. Not so well. Even for those in steady jobs, there is a creeping sense of instability, a generalized disquiet and unspoken worry that sits on one's shoulders adding drag to the day.
Packaged in this malaise is the spike in oil prices and what that will mean for gas prices and every other thing we buy, the bottoming out of the housing market, companies announcing huge layoffs, and rises in food and health insurance costs outpacing salaries and wages.
This volatility has led to a shift in how we see ourselves. "Vulnerable" is probably the best descriptor. Our thoughts turn to hunkering down rather than plans for the future.
But what makes this coming decline in economic security different from the one visited upon American families in the 1970s, for example, is that we are much less well-positioned to withstand the financial buffeting. The work of Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren indicates there is a coming collapse of the middle class and she can prove it with a raft of scary statistics and charts.
Warren says we are moving toward a two-class rather than a three-class society, where there is a somewhat larger upper class made up of the financially comfortable and then there is the rest of America, people who are "constantly living on the edge of a cliff." These are families who might appear to earn a decent income but they enjoy none of the financial security that we normally associate with middle-class status.
Warren compares the median American family of 1970 with that of 2003. She unpacks why our savings rate has dropped to zero from a rather healthy 11 percent of take-home pay in 1970, even as the family added Mom as a breadwinner.
Typically, blame for this lands on families themselves. They're spending themselves into penury by buying designer clothes for their kids and indulging in $4 lattes, say social commentators.
Not so, Warren counters. She says that Americans are actually spending far less in inflation-adjusted dollars for things like clothes and food, including eating out, than they did in 1970. What has substantially changed, Warren reports, is the cost of big-ticket, fixed expenses. So that even though the income of the median two-parent, two-child family is higher, because both parents are employed, the family has less income available to shore itself up against a rough patch.
Housing costs for a median-sized house (which has gotten modestly bigger since 1970 by adding either a second bathroom or a third bedroom but not both) have increased 76 percent. Health insurance costs are up 74 percent. Also up sharply are taxes (due to the second income), child care and car-related expenses. Americans keep a car more than two years longer than they did 30 years ago, but they now need two cars to get to two jobs.
These big, inflexible expenses cost the median family three-fourths of its two-earner income. In 1970 they cost half of the single breadwinner's.
We now live in a country where there is no financial margin for most families to fall back on in case someone gets sick or a job is lost. Life is far riskier.
Then add on an energy crisis and you can almost hear the foundation cracking.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, has received hundreds of e-mails from Americans who suddenly have found themselves in desperate financial straits. He's been reading their plaintive stories on the Senate floor. How they were middle class but are no longer.
I fear that Warren's collapse has begun.
[Last modified: Jul 03, 2008 01:56 PM]
Comments on this article
by Deacon
Jul 3, 2008 1:56 PM
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Why hasn't there been a class-action
lawsuit against the Federal Reserve
and Greenspan by ARM holders, as he
had violated his chairmanship duties
by advising that we take out an ARM?
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by Michael
Jul 1, 2008 8:46 PM
Tell bernie Sanders to get the rest of the socialist democrats in congress to do something about oil insteadof all his gas being expelled all over the place. He's just another old fashion democrat that got his money the old fashion way,HEINHERITEDIT!
by Eric
Jun 30, 2008 9:36 PM
RD---corporate "greed"???? Guess we can assume you are closer to being a welfare leech than an entrepreneur.....what should corporate CEOs do with their money? Give it to you? Keep leaning left, RD, maybe you'll fall off the cliff.
by Eric
Jun 30, 2008 9:35 PM
Well put, Arnold! If Obama gets in the White House the good ole' USA will stand for the UNITED SOCIALISTS of AMERICA.......To the lefties: grow up, work hard, and stop blaming others for your problems......
by jimmy
Jun 30, 2008 9:29 PM
Memo to Mike: Are you eating pork&beans? I doubt it. I see every sign of middle class people doing well. The poor DO suffer and I support helping the poor, but the middle class will do fine on its own. Robyn's a good writer who's misguided on this.
by Arnold
Jun 30, 2008 6:15 PM
Of all the people to write about this, Blumner, the liberals' liberal? The liberals created it! The rich liberals get out of paying taxes, the poor GET tax money, middle class "white working class" Republicans pay! Thanks, demos!
by Tom
Jun 30, 2008 4:29 PM
Well Kathy, a lot of the people with big money didn't work and make good decisions! George Bush ran 3 oil companies started with other people's money into the ground, and was bailed out by Poppy's pals.
by RD
Jun 30, 2008 1:31 PM
Yes, the middle class is disappearing. We can thank tax cuts for the rich, outsourcing and "free trade", union busting, out of control illegal immigration, deregulation and corporate greed.
by billy
Jun 30, 2008 1:11 PM
so many in the middle class have voted for their own destruction by backing the republican massive transfer of wealth. it's quite pathetic to see a political party devote so much time to keeping lesbians from marrying each other.
by Bob
Jun 30, 2008 1:10 PM
I consider this to be the most important story that appeared in today's, (6-29-08), paper. If the middle class is disappearing, it seems to me that it's members need to begin now choosing which of the remaining two classes they want to join.
by Ray
Jun 30, 2008 1:01 PM
People like Jimmy have no sense of reality. The 1929 depression put the GOP out of power for a quarter century and all they've done with Bush is prove it's time to put the GOP out again.
by Eric
Jun 30, 2008 12:59 PM
Whaa whaa whaa......there is not one person in this country (barring the disabled) who cannot better his or her life. Too bad the left loves to enable those who refuse to work hard. It's just much easier to whine and collect welfare, I guess.
by Lord Dungbeetle
Jun 30, 2008 12:52 PM
"The vise of capitalism is its unegual distribution of blessings...
The virtue of socialism is its equal distribution of misery"
Winston Churchill
Come on Robyn, write something that isn't leftist..I know you can!
by Brian
Jun 30, 2008 12:45 PM
The first sentence in this says all I needed to know. Ms. Blumner chooses to discount every wealthy person's success as being "fortunate". No hard work, no making wise choices, no staying in school and not getting pregnant. Classic class envy!
by Dave Cravatta
Jun 30, 2008 12:09 PM
This piece is typical of the Left's garbage that it continues to feed us. For Ms. Blumner's information, the Middle-Class is alive & well. My question to Ms. Blumner: what is the difference btwn a "yacht" & a "mega-yacht"?
by Kathy
Jun 30, 2008 12:06 PM
How can you call people with money "FORTUNATE"? Don't you think these people actually WORKED for their money and have made correct decisions in their lives? The "vulnerable" have only themselves to blame for their situation. Get a life and a new job!
by Mike
Jun 30, 2008 11:15 AM
Jimmy is so far to the Right that he is unable to face reality. He fails to account for anything that doesn't fit into his narrow world view and is in denial about everything that is apparent to everyone else
by Michael
Jun 30, 2008 11:10 AM
RIGHT ON ROBYN!!! YOU CONTINUE TO BE MY ALTER EGO AND WRITE OFTEN, WHAT I'M THINKING OR FEELING. THANK YOU!!!
by jimmy
Jun 29, 2008 1:20 PM
Elizabeth Warren, Blumner's source, is so far left she's not really a mainstream source. Huffington Post, Harvard, Michael Moore movies, etc. Warren fails to account for higher taxes, and a free-falling US dollar.
by jimmy
Jun 29, 2008 1:00 PM
Memo to Robyn: America's middle class is unique in the world. Despite the whining of the liberal press, which has been talking-down the Bush economy with boring regularity, restaurants are busy, gas stations are pumping gas, unemployment is low.
by Lin
Jun 29, 2008 12:39 PM
On target, insightful column.I'm among those who was once solidly middle class & I have no margin now.Thank God I don't like Western medicine, because I've been uninsured for years.My BA is in English & I have 12 hours toward a journalism masters.
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