Unit2Sucks;842474954 said:
We can't go back to 1950. If you want the middle class to succeed in the United States, you need to think about what we can do to support that middle class to succeed against global competition. This idea that people can just show up to do an honest day's work and live the American dream is based on a fiction - the fiction is that we can artificially maintain the relative value of unskilled labor the way it used to be comparatively early in the industrial revolution (which is how I'd described post-war US). I don't believe we can redistribute our way out of this.
This is a very good point, and a sad one. A giant share of our population consists of the sort of folks who used to graduate high school, serve in the armed forces for a few years, go get a union job at the auto factory, buy a brick row house, get married, raise a few kids, work for 35 years and have a modest but stable retirement. No more. Now those folks are getting out of high school or the army and struggle to get a menial service job at Starbucks. And that's because they are competing against college graduates for those jobs. LA County put out a call to hire firefighters not too long ago and six thousand guys showed up. Ever notice that a generation ago, the person behind the counter at McDonald's was a teenager? Now they are grown ass adults. It ain't a way to pay for prom, it's their livelihood. How many of you middle agers have friends whose children finished college, and basically did everything right in their life, and had to move back home because they can't find a decent job? Studies show most of them will forever lag the lifetime earnings of people who begin "careers" right out of school.
The middle class is shrinking before our eyes and that is going to be one of the biggest challenges of the coming generation. It is going to cause all sorts of social problems. People who are not hopeful about their economic opportunities are less likely to get married, start or raise families in two parent households, work hard, etc., etc., etc. The attitude becomes, F--- it, no matter what I do, I can't get ahead. I'm not invested in this society or this country. Organized crime flourishes. Large scale protests and violence becomes more commonplace. The "Occupy" movement will be seen as a precursor. Even the rich will pine for the good old days when they could live life without having to deal with the inconvenience of a large underclass.
So how do we head off that doomsday scenario? As you point out, our economy is structurally different than it was the last century and we just don't need a big head count in a factory making widgets to create wealth; we have 13 hipsters at Instagram creating the same amount (albeit only for themselves and a few VC down on Sand Hill Road). What to do about this? Adopt more protectionist economic policies? Cancel all the free trade agreements and throw up tariffs and trade barriers? Why won't some wealth redistribution work? If everyone had almost-free health care and almost-free college and a nice earned income tax credit, that low wage paycheck might almost seem middle class.
We need to find a way to provide regular folks - the kind who have done everything right in life - the opportunity to make a decent living. I'm not an economist but I like to thing about this kind of stuff. How do we save us from ourselves? Maybe the geniuses at instagram have some ideas.