The economy has evolved over the last 60 years from one in which outputs were more closely related to inputs, to more of a “build it once sell it often” model: this new model requires far fewer middle class roles to operate it and this is, perhaps, the principal social impact that technology and the internet has had on us, for it increases the economic value of the few, relative to that of the many.
Opportunity for our citizens who are not operating the complicated bits of the new economy or are not among those designing/building it, is limited: for those individuals, the prospects of financial security and comfort are distant and receding – try buying the American dream, or providing your next generation with the opportunity to achieve that dream, on $7.25 per hour (the federal minimum wage)…
This dynamic comes out in measures of equality in America. This graph plots Gini Coefficients for the major industrialized countries, over time. Perhaps no surprise that the US stands apart from the other, more social democrat countries.
Looking at what has happened inside the US, see this chart from the Pew Research Center, using Bureau of Labor Statistics data – scarcely any of the benefit of the advances in the US economy have accrued to ‘production and non supervisory’ employees (there was probably an uptick in fortunes in 2018 and 2019, as the labor market tightened, but not enough to redress 45 years of stagnation):
Any (crunchy) policy responses to address this issue? Crunchicrant does not really see the creation of opportunity as a role of federal government but looks at two areas where the federal government could impact opportunity, without breaching principles of crunchiness:
Opportunity – can government help?