Saturday, October 10, 2009

Elizabeth Warren: An Ode to the Middle Class

Elizabeth Warren is a professor @ Harvard Law School and, in the words of Cornell "Not Related To Kayne" West, a "decent sister." Belwo is an excerpt from an interview she did with the Washington Post. Full text of interview here.



WARREN:we're in trouble on so many fronts.

I will start with credit. We clean up the credit mess. This is like sewing up a hole in the bottom of someone's pocket. This is literally tens of billions of dollars that are just falling out of the pockets of middleclass families and making their way over to a handful of very large financial institutions. We can change some laws, and we can fix that one.

I have to say on health care, I do studies on families filing for bankruptcy in the aftermath of serious medical problems. Whatever else is going on in the debate is the reminder that even with people with health insurance are paying enormous sums for medical care, whether it's about copays, things that are denied and higher prices that they're paying for their health insurance. So whatever we can do to bring those costs under control for middle class families will help enormously.

Sending the kids to college, the costs are just out of control. And we are putting debt loads on children unlike those we have ever imagined.

The housing crisis. The way in which most American families build wealth is not through the stock market. It's by buying a home and paying it off. That is, for most Americans, their retirement account. They'll get that house paid off, live on Social Security. That'll be the in heritance for the children if they don't have to spend it down for medical care.

The chaos in the housing market is destroying wealth for middle-class families. To the extent we're popping a bubble, I get it. That's what it's going to have to be. But I worry now about overshooting in the other direction. You know, that just like a bubble pushes up too high, the collapse pushes down too low.

We're watching more and more families go underwater on their mortgages and not by 5 percent, going underwater by 25 and 30 percent. And this is going to intersect with unemployment. As unemployment keeps going up, more and more people are going to lose their houses. That means it depresses the value of the houses next door because it's all downward pressure on prices.

And, of course, the last one I would mention is the income front. As the pie grew throughout the 20th century, the portion that went to workers, went to the median earning family in the United States, it stayed the same percentage wise, but that meant a bigger and bigger pie was a bigger and bigger slice of pizza.

That began to shift in the '70s, and, ultimately, what happened is that the pie kept getting bigger. It's measured through productivity. It's measured through GDP. But the proportion that middleclass families got in income began to shrink.

As we talk about things, like what we produce in the United States, do we really have any manufacturing base, if not hard manufacturing, do we have other intellectual products where we think we have a comparative advantage, those kinds of issues about how workers get back in the role of participating in the growth in our economy, that's whether or not we're going to have a strong and vital middle class.

And, you know, at the end of the day, it's about these economic factors, but we have to remember we have fundamentally changed as a country.

In the 1950s and the 1960s, coming out of World War II, we said as a government, as a people, what can we do to support the middle class. You know that's what FHA was to help people get into homes, right? VA, GI loans on education, we looked at policies, like whether or not they strengthen and support the middle class.

Somewhere, that began to change in the late 1970s, early 1980s, and the middle class instead became like a resource to be pulled from, and you know, they became the turkey at the Thanksgiving dinner. Who could who could carve off a piece? Who can get this little piece? Who could make a profit from this piece and that piece or squeeze down on the wages? And the middle class has gotten shakier and shakier, hollowed out.

The consequences of that are far more than economic. The middle class is what makes us who we are. It's affects the poor. A strong and vital middle class is a middle class that can offer a helping hand to the poor. A strong and vital middle class is a middle class that has room, is creating new jobs to ¿ basically to suck the poor up out of poverty and into middleclass positions. The middle class is what gives us political stability. It's what gives us an America that's all bought into the whole process that what we do is not just about a handful of folks at the top who profit from it. We all profit from it, and that's why we work, and that's why we vote, and that's why we accept that the outcome of elections. And that's why we're safe to walk our streets, because we have a middle class for which this ultimately works, this country.

And every time we hollow that out, every time we take away a little piece of that, we run the risk that some of what we understood at America, some of what we know as America begins to die. That's what scares me.

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