Content Partner
Grades 6-8, 9-12
Don't have an account yet? Sign up for free
Don't have an account yet? Sign up for free
This year’s federal elections will involve electing a president, all members of the House of Representatives, and one third of the Senate. Barring some international crisis, economic issues appear likely to dominate the debates. In past elections, macroeconomic issues related to the business cycle, such as problems of inflation, unemployment, and slow economic growth, were the main focus of debate. Because of the recent overall economic performance, current debate on these issues has been muted. In its place, debates concerning the distribution of wealth and income have come to the forefront.
Specifically, Republicans and Democrats differ on how the benefits of our economic prosperity should be distributed. Particularly, they differ on what should be done with current and future budget surpluses. The Republican plan appears straightforward: cut taxes. After all, returning money to those paying the taxes will stimulate the economy and encourage additional investment. The resulting economic expansion will mean more jobs, higher incomes, more employment, world peace, and heaven on earth.
Democrats don't buy the argument. They argue that the wealthy have been the major beneficiaries of the current economic expansion, and that reducing taxes will allow them to receive still greater benefits. Therefore, we must first assure the solvency of the social security program and then undertake programs that will directly benefit lower income individuals and families — and not through some "trickle down" benefits that result indirectly from the tax cuts.
Republicans respond by stating that the Democrats are presenting arguments that are promoting class warfare. They are pitting lower income households against upper income households rather than promoting policies that benefit all. Democrats argue that the policies advocated by Republicans largely benefit the wealthy, and they present evidence that during the current expansion the distribution of income has become more unequal and the poor have been left behind.
What do the income distribution data show? Can we infer from the data that the wealthy are benefiting relative to the less wealthy? Who has benefited from the recent economic expansion? Who has not benefited? Why? These are among the questions regarding the effects of the current economic expansion that are examined in this Economics Minute.
A cursory examination of data, whether it be income distribution data or something else, often hides more than it reveals. A major purpose of this EconomicsMinute is to encourage individuals to look deeper into economic data before making decisions.
Income distribution
For reasons such as differences in education, age, skills, workers' preferences, experience, heredity, marital status, and luck, incomes among individuals and households differ. The Bureau of the Census periodically publishes data on the distribution of income. Traditionally, the income distribution data are divided into quintiles (fifths); the lowest 20 percent of income earners, the second 20 percent of income earners, and so on. If all households were to receive exactly the same income, each 20 percent (one fifth or each quintile) of households would receive 20 percent of the national income. https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/historical-income-households.html are shown in Table H-2.
Activities
Distribution of spending
While the distribution of income figures imply a pattern of persistent poverty for the lowest income earners in society, other data portray a different picture. The Census Bureau's annual report on poverty has information on the number of Americans living in poverty. Other government reports detail the material conditions of those defined as poor. The Heritage Foundation has published some facts about the material conditions of those classified by the Census Bureau as poor.
Access the following website and read the "Backgrounder" of the report, "https://www.heritage.org/welfare/report/the-myth-widespread-american-poverty-0 " (the site also contains a short Executive Summary and the full text version of the report). Answer the following questions.
Income Mobilty
The income distribution data show the percent of households in different income categories. It gives an impression that our society is a class society, with a relatively small percentage of the population having high incomes and a large majority having relatively small incomes. Moreover, it gives the impression that there is permanence to one's status in society .
The U.S. Senate's Joint Economic Committee's (JEC) recent study titled "https://www.jec.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/8187f1f2-eb54-4ab2-844c-5b0aafcd87fd/economic-inequality-and-mobility—a-dynamic-picture.pdf" belies the picture given by the income distribution data. In short, the U.S. society is not a static society, but a very dynamic society. It provides opportunities for individuals to alter their status. A look at the JEC's most recent study of income mobility provides data regarding the movements among households across the income distribution categories.
Two graphs and one table summarize the JEC's findings with respect to income mobility in the United States. As an activity, have the students answer the following questions.
The Declining Cost of Living
We have seen that many people do meet the Census Bureau's criteria for being poor. Yet substantially fewer persons are in abject poverty. Moreover, of the 20 percent of the households in the lowest income quintile, relatively few remain at the low end of the income scale over time. Nevertheless, the poor are always with us.
Is there any evidence that the cost of acquiring goods and services is lower today than it has been in the past? If it is, then the plight of lower income families is not as dire as people often say it is. Indeed, lower prices may help explain why the poor can acquire goods and services that were only available to those in higher income groups in the past. In other words, if the cost of living has declined, the poor may be better off than before because the necessities of life now cost them less, in terms of income and in time
W. Michael Cox, of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, and Richard Alm, of the Dallas Morning News, have documented changes in the cost of living in the United States. Their work is presented in an article titled "https://www.dallasfed.org/~/media/documents/fed/annual/1999/ar97.pdf." The article appeared in the 1997 Annual Report of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Exhibits 1 and 2 in this report contain information about average wages over the past 100 years and show that today's wages are substantially higher than in the past. For example, the average wage for production and nonsupervisory workers in 1897 was almost 15 cents per hour. In 1997, it was $13.18. This is not what is today considered a high wage, but as Cox and Alm point out it is a livable wage. What is important, however, is not the wage rate or income, but what that wage or income level can purchase. Information concerning the time and effort required to acquire various products over various time periods begins in Exhibit 3.
Activities
Divide the students into teams and have them page through the report. Ask the teams what they found to be the most surprising change in the cost of living. Why were they surprised? Challenge them to find any item where the cost has remained the same or increased in both the dollar amount and the time necessary to purchase the good or service. Ask the students why the cost remained the same or increased on the items they identified.
Divide the students into teams of four. Remind the students that they have looked at income distribution data, distribution of spending data, income mobility data, and cost of living data. Ask them to discuss whether there are large percentages of the population that are stuck at the low end of the income distribution.
Content Partner
Grades 6-8, 9-12
Content Partner
Grades K-2, 3-5
Grades 6-8
Grades 6-8, 9-12