The former chief economist for the Dallas Fed, W. Michael Cox, has a interesting article on how the the availability of products has spread over time, and describes living conditions of the middle class in America today. Check out this chart.
Cox writes: "It's certainly true that the past two years have been tough for many middle-class Americans. Many of them have lost jobs and homes, seen their investments decline and, more broadly, faced new uncertainties about incomes.
Families are suffering in every community – but the entire middle class under assault? Don't believe it. No hard evidence points to a general decline in living standards for the average American family. Perhaps, having it so good for so long has created expectations, some of them a bit unreasonable. Consider:
•America's middle class lives in bigger and better-equipped homes than ever before, with appliances of all kinds, air conditioning, big-screen televisions, computers, DVD players, digital cameras and so much more (see chart above, "The Spread of Products into U.S. Households").
•Nine in 10 households own a car – better equipped, more durable and more fuel efficient than any in history.
•Cell phones once cost $4,200, but they're now less than $100. Nearly every pocket and purse holds a cell phone, many now with Internet access.
•In real terms, the average family's net worth has tripled since 1970, even after the past two years of declines in housing prices and stocks.
•Tap water's free, but Americans still buy 8.6 billion gallons of bottled water a year.
•Obesity has replaced hunger as the most pressing dietary concern.
Innovation and trade continually drive down the real cost of goods and services and increase the productivity of each hour of work. As this capitalist engine churns onward, the scarcity that plagued mankind for millennia has given way to the abundance that's the foundation of today's vast middle class.
The capitalist system literally created the middle class, and the best way to maintain and improve our living standards lies in keeping it functioning at peak efficiency. Government largesse, no matter how high-minded or well-intended, isn't going to do much for the majority of middle-class families. They have to pay their own way – as always."
H/T: Carpe Diem
1 comment:
Hi. I like the graph.
"People are working longer and longer hours to accomplish less and less. New families can't afford to buy their first homes. In many families, both parents must work to make ends meet. Young people coming out of hign school or college can't find a job..."
-- Ross Perot, 1992.
Perot imagined it? Michael Cox is wearing the rose-colored glasses?? Things magically improved after 1992???
Anyway, it's a good graph.
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