WFLA News Channel 8 The Tampa Tribune CentroTampa.com

News :: Opinion

Print This Print Bookmark and Share

TBO > News > Opinion

American Workers: Still Getting Ahead ... For Now

ADVERTISEMENT

Published: July 15, 2008

Where will you be in five years? Many claim the American dream has died. Earnings have supposedly stagnated, even while corporate profits boom and health coverage disappears. Most Americans believe the economy is in a recession. Pick up any newspaper, and it seems the days when most Americans could work hard and expect to get ahead are over.

But look more closely at the polls. They show that most Americans think it's harder for other Americans to get ahead, but that they personally will be better off in the future.

How can most Americans believe that opportunities are vanishing for others but not for themselves? Partly because the economy faces many real challenges. The rising price of gas is one, obviously. And food is more expensive - partly because of laws that call for turning one-eighth of the global corn crop into ethanol.

Reports that most Americans are not getting ahead mesh with the financial pain Americans feel on a daily basis. But despite these problems, few believe they have no chance of getting ahead. And they're right. The claim that working Americans are falling behind has little factual basis.

Take workers' earnings. We often hear they've stagnated over the last eight years, but that's not true. Yes, the growth of cash wages has slowed since the tech bubble burst. However, a third of workers' earnings comes in the form of benefits, such as paid time off, retirement plans and health insurance. The average American's total hourly earnings have risen 17 percent over the past eight years. The typical employee today earns 20 percent more paid time off, 33 percent more in retirement benefits and 50 percent more in health benefits per hour worked than in 2000.

Now, more benefits don't make workers feel wealthy the way higher wages can. Retirement benefits aren't spent for decades. And unless you're seriously ill, you get nothing (for now) from new - and expensive - medical advances. But these non-cash earnings provide workers real benefits, and they cost employers real money.

Living standards have improved in other ways. Nearly everyone has a cell phone. Since the iPod was introduced in 2001, it has almost become a necessity for tens of millions of Americans. Virtually everyone who wants a PC has purchased one (or more) in the last decade.

Workers earn, in both cash and benefits, 70 percent of America's total national income, a percentage that's essentially unchanged over the past 40 years. Corporations aren't denying workers the fruits of their labor.

Perhaps that's why most Americans believe they will personally get ahead.

Still, politicians are eager to exploit a crisis of their own making.

Barack Obama wants to raise the top marginal tax rate on individuals above 50 percent, a step that seems intended to ensure no American gets too far ahead. Every Democrat in the Senate has signed on to legislation intended to promote union membership by stripping workers of their right to vote in a secret ballot before joining a union. Union organizers soon may be able to make workers an offer they can't refuse.

America remains a land of opportunity, where most people have a chance to get ahead. And it will stay that way - unless politicians decide otherwise.

James Sherk is the Bradley Fellow in Labor Policy at The Heritage Foundation.

Share this:
Loading Comments...
Loading
Print This Print Bookmark and Share
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

IYP and SEO vendors: SEO by eLocalListing | Advertiser profiles
Oops! Your email could not be sent because of the following errors: