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Monday, October 17, 2011

On a Personal note: Still remembered

Today is my off Monday (I get every other Monday off) so I washed some clothes this morning.  I won't get a chance this week and on Saturday I should be going to Providence Rhode Island.

Normally the laundry room downstairs is almost empty during the morning and today was no exception.  The only other person down there for a while was an older West Indian woman in her 50s.  She was drying her clothes when I got there.  We didn't say anything to each other until she was almost ready to leave.  Then she approached me as I was sitting down.

"Excuse me, I haven't seen that gentleman around lately".
"Pardon"
"There was a gentleman who would come down with you sometimes.  The older gentleman"
"Yes?"
"Was that your father?"
"Oh, yes"
"Oh I remembered an older gentleman but I hadn't seen him in a while..."
"Yes that was my father"
"Is he ok or.."
"No. He passed away in March"
"Oh I am so sorry to hear that.  I THOUGHT I had seen a picture of him earlier this year but I wasn't sure".
"Yes, he passed away.  He hurt himself late last year and was in a rehab facility.  Unfortunately he had a heart attack in March and passed away".

The lady apologized again, packed her laundry and eventually left. From time to time I still get condolences from neighbors and it's been seven months.  It doesn't bother me.  In fact I am pleased that so many people knew him or knew of him and they felt compelled to approach me.  There are people I hardly know who will speak to me regarding Dad.  That shows the impact he had.  He left his mark and I can only hope I can do the same in my life.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

IN THE NEWS: An old article from Speakout.com

Is the Democratic Party Ignoring the Homeless?

by John Barry
Thursday, June 15, 2000

From 1987 to 1997, the demand for emergency food and shelter indicate that despite the booming economy and the new prosperity, the number of homeless and those living in extreme poverty in the United States has increased. According to a recent White House press release, the number of homeless at any given time has now reached 750,000.
The homeless are not necessarily penniless, or without four walls. While anywhere from 25 to 40 percent of the homeless have jobs - depending on the city — many have no access to affordable housing. Some attribute this to the increase in property rates that reflect the income discrepancy caused by the "new prosperity" of the nineties. In Indiana, for instance, 50 percent of the homeless are working, as compared to 3 percent in 1987. While an hourly wage of $7.92 is needed to afford a cheap one-bedroom apartment in the city, most earnless than $6 an hour. The average low-income family now spends about 50 percent of its money on rent.
Homelessness became a visible issue during the eighties. From 1984 to 1987, according to HUD statistics, the number of homeless doubled.
Throughout most of that decade, the response to homelessness was largely local. President Reagan and the Republican Party generally advocated private charity on the local level as a response to the problem. In 1987, the McKinney Act was reluctantly signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. Sponsored by Republican Stewart McKinney, this Homeless Assistance Act provided emergency relief provisions for shelter, food, mobile health care, and transitional housing for homeless. Since 1995, the funding for the Act has declined by 27 percent. While many feel that the act is an important first step by the government, which has eased the blow of emergency housing shortages. Senator Al Gore was one of its first sponsors:
"McKinney is an essential first step towards establishing a national agenda or action to eradicate homelessness in America. No one in this body should believe that the legislation we begin considering today is anything more than a first step towards reversing the record increase in homelessness." (Congressional Record, p.S3683, March 23, 1987)
In 1994, President Clinton issued an Executive Order to the Interagency Council on the Homeless for "breaking the cycle of homelessness and preventing future homelessness." But in recent years, with the increasing prosperity, the President retreated on homelessness. His 1996, 97, and 98 budgets all cut the housing programs of the 104th Congress. While the 1994 federal plan acknowledged the central role of poverty in homelessness, the 1996 welfare proposal was passed despite research indicating that it would push one million children into poverty. The president's latest pronouncements have focused on "individual responsibility" for poverty.
Is there any indication that the Democratic Party this year is willing to take another major step toward defeating homelessness?
On One Hand...
The Democratic Party has been ignoring the plight of the homeless. The McKinney Act doesn't address the real problems behind homelessness — which include the minimum wage, the lack of housing, and the plight of single women. Since the dramatic increase in homelessness during the eighties, we are in danger of accepting this phenomenon as a constant in society. The Democratic Party needs to recognize that homelessness is a moral outrage, and that it is already beginning to breed a generation of young children who have been abused, who aren't educated, who don't have health insurance, and who aren't paid enough to protect themselves against increases in rent or cost of living. The cost of providing shelter to a homeless person is lower than the cost of imprisoning them for "loitering". But the burden of doing that will become impossible to bear if we don't start another campaign against homelessness that targets the structural and economic causes of this injustice.
In Los Angeles, according to the city's estimates, there are 5-8 homeless people for every shelter bed. President Clinton's administration has let this problem grow out of control. Strong measures must be taken to address the root causes of homelessness.
On the Other Hand...
The Democrats have been championing the cause of the homeless for decades. By reducing the unemployment level to 4 percent and by championing the cause of the homeless with his Priority: Home! Plan in 1995, Bill Clinton has led the full-scale attack on homelessness.
This is the first federal plan to attack the roots of homelessness by making abandoned housing available as permanent housing for poor people. Previous legislation since the McKinney Act was aimed at emergency measures for transitional housing, food distribution, and healthcare.
Al Gore will bring the same concern for the homeless into the 21st century. As senator, he was instrumental in writing the Homeless Person's Survival Act, which provided emergency relief for the homeless. He was also one of the major supporters of the 1987 McKinney Act. To truly address the plight of homelessness, though, the problem should be faced on the individual level.


  • In a 1996 study of evening news programs in 1989: Under Bush there were 44 stories on homelessness in 1989, 54 in 1991, and 43 in 1992. The average was 52.5. Under Clinton there were 35 in 1993, 32 in 1994, and just nine in 1995, for an average of 25.3.
  • In 1987, a Urban Institute study found that while only 12 percent of the U.S. population is black, they make up about 40 percent of the homeless.
  • During the Great Depression, the number of able bodied men forced into homeless due to unemployment rates approached 25 percent.
  • Al Gore turned down an invitation by homeless advocate Ted Hayes to visit the Dome Villiage homeless encampment two blocks from the Staples Center during the Convention. Hayes, who is seeking funding for the Homeless Convention said, "Don't just come into our neighborhood and pretend we aren't there. Hold a news conference with us. Do something."
  • A 1995 evaluation found that approximately 86% of the homeless children and youth attended school regularly. A majority of the service providers and shelter operators felt that homeless children faced difficulties in being evaluated for special education programs and services, and in obtaining counseling and psychological services.
  • "After more than 35 years of trying to help homeless people with every imaginable problem, I cannot escape this fact: Men and women who walk away from their jobs, their families, and their homes do so because, fundamentally, they are turning away God and his claim on their lives." - Rev. Stephen Burger
    Media Reality Check; Symposium- Populations of Homeless Americans; Los Angeles Times; National Coalition of the Homeless; Policy Review, Heritage Foundation

Thursday, August 4, 2011

NEWS ITEM courtesy of Knowledge Wharton

This is an interesting link and it is a transcript of a conversation regarding the winners and losers in the debt ceiling mess.

http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2824

News: The Debt Ceiling Debate

Q&A: What Does The Debt Ceiling Deal Mean For Ordinary Americans?

Obama Debt Deal
First Posted: 8/3/11 04:41 PM ET Updated: 8/3/11 05:19 PM ET
Over the past few days, the media has frothed over their horse-race traditions, pleasuring themselves with the question of who "won" the debt ceiling debate. And once they felt they had an adequate answer to that question, they threw a party! Left out of the conversation, as per usual, are ordinary Americans. Because I doubt that more than a few will make the attempt, I shall hereby try to explain what just happened in simple terms, and then inform all the normal people who are typically left out of the political conversation what life is likely to be like, from here on out.
I'd say, "Enjoy!" But there's no enjoyment to be had.
-----
So, what are the basics of the debt deal?
Simply put, the deal that's been wrought trades two rounds of steep spending cuts for two matching increases in the debt limit. The first set of cuts comes immediately, to the tune of $900 billion. Per the White House's fact sheet, these cuts are "balanced between defense and non-defense spending." By "balanced," we mean "$350 billion from the base defense budget" and the remaining amount coming from non-defense discretionary spending. That leaves entitlement cuts out of the first round, which means we're talking about cuts to education, health and human services, infrastructure spending, and the like. There are "binding caps" on these cuts that extend for the next ten years.
After that, Congress forms a "super committee" that is tasked with identifying an additional $1.5 trillion in additional cuts. Here, entitlements become part of the target. The super committee is also allowed to work on tax reform.
Plus there is a promise to allow a vote on a balanced budget amendment.
A super committee? They are actually going with "super committee?"
Yes. We are governed by children. The thinking seems to be that previous committees have failed to address the problem, but maybe by improving this committee's self-esteem by imbuing it with the descriptor "super," they will fare better. Keep in mind that one of the groups that have failed to address the pressing needs of the nation over the past decade is called "Congress."
How does the super committee work?
Congressional Democrats and Congressional Republicans shall, from the House and Senate, each select six of their most able bodied deficit peacocks. Those with the prettiest plumage will get in. There, they will work to make their $1.5 trillion in cuts, with a Thanksgiving deadline. It will require seven yes votes to send a recommended plan to Congress. Both houses of Congress will hold a straight up-or-down vote on the committee's recommendations, which they cannot amend.
This at least seems like an improvement over the Simpson-Bowles commission, which needed a supermajority to agree on a plan, right?
Indeed, that's true. But the super committee remains a venue rife for dysfunction. Nancy Pelosi, for example, has promised to only send members to the super committee that will hold the line on entitlement cuts. Her counterpart, John Boehner, has said that he believes the super committee lacks the power to suggest or impose any revenue increases. He's wrong about that, as far as the committee's powers go, but the message is clear -- those GOP votes won't include any badly needed revenue increases.
What if Democrats insist on revenue increases?
That's where lobbyists ruin the world, as per usual. Matt Yglesias spells out the scenario:
First, Republicans refuse to agree to more revenue. Second, Democrats refuse to agree to a no-revenue deal. Third, lobbyists for the defense and health care industries get nervous. Fourth, lobbyists for the defense and health care industries remember that they are high-income people who don't want to pay taxes. Fifth, executives at defense and health care industries remember that they are high-income people who don't want to pay taxes. Sixth, executives at defense and health care industries start lobbying Democrats in swing districts, red states, or in which key weapons manufacturing or certain hospitals are major industries. Seventh, Democrats fold.
So, what happens if the super committee gets bogged down?
Well, that's where the real fun begins. Should the super committee fail (or should Congress fail to pass their recommendations), it will touch off the "trigger!" As Ezra Klein explains:
In his remarks on Friday, President Obama said he would support a trigger if it was done in "a smart and balanced way." The implication was that it had to include tax increases as well as spending cuts, as a trigger with just spending cuts wouldn't force Republicans to negotiate in good faith. The trigger in this deal does not include tax increases. What it includes instead are massive cuts to the defense budget. If Congress doesn't pass a second round of deficit reduction, the trigger cuts $1.2 trillion over 10 years. Fully half of that comes from defense spending. And note that I didn't say "security spending." The Pentagon takes the full hit if the trigger goes off.
The other half of the trigger comes from domestic spending. But Social Security, Medicaid and a few other programs for the poor are exempted. So the trigger is effectively treating defense spending like it comprises more than half of all federal spending. If it goes off, the cuts to that sector will be tremendous -- particularly given that they will come on top of the initial round of cuts. Whether you think the trigger will work depends on whether you think the GOP would permit that level of cuts to defense.

To be clear, while the trigger cuts spare the beneficiaries of entitlement programs, it doesn't mean that entitlements will be left unaffected. As Klein explains elsewhere, Medicare providers are on the chopping block -- and it's not unreasonable to suggest that a tightened budget anywhere in the Medicare system will end up adversely affecting recipients as well.
Well, regardless of how the GOP feels about Medicare, that threat to defense spending would seem to be a powerful incentive for the GOP to play ball in the budget debate, right?
Credit where due: there are plenty of Democrats with a hard-on for defense spending and who get courted by defense lobbyists. And there's some Republicans who are happy to support cuts to the military budget. But I can see your point. Indeed, putting the Pentagon in front of the trigger is often presented as the bitter pill that Republicans had to swallow in the enactment of this bargain. And more than a few have cited their concerns about this. (So has Obama's Defense Secretary, Leon Panetta.)
But let's get real. This is how this will work: if the trigger goes off and the Pentagon gets gutted, House Republicans will go to work restoring the funding by whatever means they have at their disposal. Anyone who protests will get tarred as someone who is "not serious about protecting America from the terrorists" or some nonsense like that. If things stay true to form, the Democrats will panic and the cuts will get reversed.
But the real problem isn't what happens down the line, it's what happens when the trigger goes off. President Barack Obama will be on the hook for endorsing the defense cuts in the trigger. He'll be blamed for gutting defense.
So, from where I sit, there are actually powerful incentives for the GOP to not play ball. I believe that they'd welcome the trigger.
That brings me to a different question. I know you hate talking about the horse-race side of this, but who do you think won the debt ceiling debate?
It's not that I don't like talking about it, it's just that you don't need to dither around with any mystical political bullshit. The answer to the question, "Who won?" is "The GOP, unambiguously, full stop." I don't believe that the GOP was forced to accept any terms that they didn't like in this deal, for the simple reason that they didn't have to! They held all the leverage, they dictated the terms. I think you're kidding yourself if you think the GOP is worried about the trigger. This deal aligns with their priorities and positions, straight up and down.
This isn't limited to the deal itself. This whole episode has underscored an idea that's central to the GOP's governing philosophy -- government just doesn't work. It takes triggers, and committees and hostage taking to get anything done. Had deficit reduction come about in a reasonable manner, the GOP would have been a big loser. They exist to prove that government is inherently dysfunctional.
But we can at least say that the Tea Party failed, right?
Can we? Sure, of the Republican members of Congress who voted against the deal, you're going to see a strong intersection with Tea Party identity. But while the Tea Party didn't get everything they would have liked, their victory is nevertheless clear. It used to be unthinkable that lawmakers could get away with threatening to blow up the world economy for the sake of getting some spending cuts. The Tea Party's gravitational pull has made this the new, moderate, reasonable position. And in fact, Senator Mitch McConnell, who's knocked heads with a few Tea Partyers in his own caucus, has made this change perfectly clear: "In the future, any president, this one or another one, when they request us to raise the debt ceiling, it will not be clean anymore."
So, we should expect more standoffs like this one?
A better way of looking at things is that on those rare occasions where there isn't some massive episode of hostage-taking, we'll be able to count ourselves as lucky. The hostage-taking tactic is now permanently enshrined.
So where's the next hostage situation likely to take place?
Could be any number of venues. Debate over the gas tax. Policy riders. Per McConnell's promise, certainly the next time there's a need to raise the debt ceiling. Anytime a government shutdown is possible.
But isn't there a cost if the GOP keeps doing this? What if the Democrats turn the tables on a future GOP president?
I've given that matter a lot of thought. Much of the government's functionality has eroded over the past few years because of a parliamentary tactic arms race between the two parties. One side filibusters the crap out of the other when they're up, and the other side returns the favor when the majority flips. At those moments, the angel on my shoulder pleads for good governance. But I'll admit that the devil on the other shoulder relishes it when the other side gets a turn with cricket bat, and adores the long arc at the face of the guy who wielded it last. I think that in the halls of power, there are a lot of people who heed the devil on their shoulder.
But when we're talking about filibusters or secret holds, keep in mind that we're talking about things that are arguably enshrined parliamentary traditions in which members are allowed to indulge. This debt ceiling ransoming is a thing apart. Joe Biden likened it to terrorism. Having called it that, it seems a pretty tough hang for Democrats to threaten a future Republican president with the same tactics.
Certainly there will be some who advocate for a little of the ol' turnabout-is-fair-play. You'll definitely see bloggers begging for it. But in the end, remember, it's bad for the country. And the Democrats are uniquely invested in demonstrating the virtues of governmental institutions. It really would be going to the dark side.
So the short answer is that we won't know until the shoe is on the other foot, but I strongly suspect that the Dems won't indulge in hostage taking of their own. Nancy Pelosi, for her part, says she won't consider it. And despite McConnell's statement, I doubt that a GOP majority will trouble a chief executive of their own with such threats. But if the Democrats play that card, you can count on the GOP to stamp their feet and complain, as if they hadn't resorted to similar tactics.
What impact will this debt deal have on the unemployment crisis?
We've saved the best question for last. The nation's unemployed didn't get anything out of the debt deal, except for a weakened bargaining position and a significant reduction in leverage for any lawmakers who want to help end the unemployment crisis.
That's what passes for good news! Tim Geithner, in the pages of the Washington Post Wednesday, promises the umpteenth "pivot to jobs." But what is he offering? Little more than a promise that the jagged little pill the American people will now have to swallow may have medicinal side effects.
As for the White House, Robert Reich runs down the weak sauce: Obama's got no room to extend tax cuts on the middle class, no ability to create a "WPA or Civilian Conservation Corps" type of jobs program, no way of unburdening cash-strapped state governments, and an infrastructure bank that's a non-starter unless it's a fully private concern -- with working class laborers building toll roads and "user-fee" services that benefit the affluent.
The Federal Reserve? No-go:
The basic challenge for the Fed is this: It is charged by Congress with maintaining stable prices and maximum employment. But when those goals are in conflict with each other, that makes it hard to decide what to do. And right now, the nation seems to be losing ground on jobs, adding them too slowly to reduce unemployment. Yet prices are rising at about the 2 percent or so annual pace that the Fed considers to be stable. Anything the Fed does to try to address the weak job market may well cause inflation to rise above its leaders' comfort level.
That's still not the worst news:
The Economic Policy Institute, a top nonpartisan think tank, estimates that the deal struck this weekend to raise the nation's debt limit will end up costing the economy 1.8 million jobs by 2012. [...]
The agreement would reduce spending by at least $1 trillion over 10 years, but even the near-term cuts could shrink already sluggish GDP growth by 0.3% in 2012. According to EPI, the plan "not only erodes funding for public investments and safety-net spending, but also misses an important opportunity to address the lack of jobs." In particular, the immediate spending cuts and the "failure to continue two key supports to the economy (the payroll tax holiday and emergency unemployment benefits for the long term unemployed) could lead to roughly 1.8 million fewer jobs in 2012."

In short, the deal wrought as a part of putting a stop to the insane hostage-taking both exacerbates the unemployment problem and cripples the chances of reversing the downward trend.
The people who forced this deal on the American people now own the unemployment crisis. But that will be cold comfort to ordinary Americans, I'm afraid



Courtesy Huffington Post

IN THE NEWS.....Debt ceiling


The American People Lost the Debt Ceiling Debate

Posted: 8/4/11 07:05 AM ET
The debt ceiling fracas was an insanity-inducing syllabus of everything that's wrong with the American political system. Everything.
The very serious cable news media (and a considerable chunk of the blogosphere for that matter) were preoccupied with safe, superficial sports and/or poker metaphors: who won, who lost, who "doubled-down" and so forth. After all, covering the wonky aspects of the policy itself is no fun and involves math.
The Republican Party, meanwhile, having been responsible for the bulk of the debt in the first place, was allowed to get away with sabotaging the stability of the global economy as the centerpiece of its plan to subsequently sabotage the president. At the same time, one of its congressional leaders, Eric Cantor, was short selling government bonds -- a blindingly outrageous conflict of interest that ought to vindicate Pete Rose for any comparatively trivial wagering sanctions he continues to endure.
The Democratic Party and the White House, paralyzed by fear (fear of taking an aggressive posture for fear of losing the fickle, insufferable middle), helped to push the Overton Window farther to the right.
Far-right conservatives and tea party activists continued to illustrate their willful inability to grasp an even grade-school level understanding of the economy and governing.
The progressive left was out-hustled by far-right activism yet again.
And a for-profit, publicly traded corporation, Moody's, became the ultimate judge as to the viability and strength of the United States of America's credit rating. Think about this while trying to fall asleep tonight: several for-profit corporations, with Moody's at the helm, possess a staggering level of control over America's ability to borrow money, and therefore they essentially controls the pulse of the American economy. Sleep tight!
But none of these observations match up to the super-colossal problem with the debt ceiling debate and the inexplicable outcry for deficit reduction.
Simply put: deficit reduction during a slow-growth recovery from an historically deep recession, with continued high unemployment and a housing market still in crisis, is just phenomenally stupid.
When has deficit reduction ever stimulated economic growth during a difficult recovery, and especially considering the disturbing economic indicators we're experiencing today (sluggish GDP, high unemployment, housing crisis, etc)? Never. In fact, the next nearest example -- the conservative budget cuts of 1937 during the recovery from the Great Depression -- damned us to another major recession, which spiked unemployment by nearly 10 percentage points and required another three years for the economy to return to its pre-austerity levels.
So regardless of the deal's content, this shouldn't have been an issue in the first place and we're all going to pay the price irrespective of political party or ideological affiliation.
We never should have been taking seriously the malevolent and utterly premature demands for deficit reduction -- not until the economy was back on solid footing. In fact, and in the best of circumstances, all of the sturm und drang we've endured this year should have been over the magnitude of a second stimulus plan, because if there's one thing that can be proved by historical precedent is that stimulus creates jobs and economic growth, which, in turn, increases government revenue. Indisputable fact.
When fewer of us are pumping money into the economy because, for example, we're unemployed or our house is underwater or, if we own a business, sales disappear, the government is in a unique position to fill in the void with additional spending until the economy is stabilized and growing steadily. There's nothing wrong with deficit reduction, but only when economic strength will allow it, and only if the wealthiest one percent, who disproportionately own 40 percent of the nation's wealth, are willing to contribute in accordance with their means rather than saddling the least fortunate and the nation's workers with the burden.
And the debt ceiling deal leaves those rich people unharmed, while, despite the president's assurances, the rest of us will bear the cost.
Here's how.
There are renewed warnings of another recession. The Financial Times reports that we're "one false move" away from recession. In the same piece, Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, warned of a "1937 moment." Well, of course. Harvard economist Martin Feldstein is predicting a 50/50 chance of another recession. According to the Huffington Post, Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of the financial services company PIMCO, says we're at the tipping point of another recession. Wall Street, for what it's worth, is also bracing for another recession. Personally, I experienced the stinky ass-end of the previous recession, and, suffice to say, I'm not thrilled with the prospect of a sequel.
The deal will reduce job growth by millions. The nonpartisan Economic Policy Institute reports that the debt ceiling deal will reduce GDP by 0.3 percent in 2012. Not good considering current growth of around 1, or 1.5 percent at best. Plus, the real cuts don't kick in until 2013. That means we'll be hitting the serious cuts while teetering on increasingly unstable footing. But that's not the grim news. The EPI is calculating that 1.8 million jobs will be killed in 2012 due to the big debt deal.
Poor people will, indeed, bear the cost. Due to the discretionary spending cuts in the deal, the states, which are limping through their own budget calamities, won't be receiving enough federal money for crucial social programs. CBS News reports that the cuts will hurt "everything from the Head Start school readiness program, Meals on Wheels and worker training initiatives to funding for transit agencies and education grants that serve disabled children." Additionally, "There also was concern among governors, state lawmakers and state agency heads that Congress would make deep reductions or changes in federal aid for health services for the needy, most notably through Medicaid. That could shift more of the costs onto states that already are having trouble balancing their budgets."
I'm not sure how this deal does anything short of adding, at the very least, another major obstruction in the path to recovery in the best case scenario, and, in the worst case scenario, another 1937.
CNN's Ali Velshi gets credit for the quote of the week:
"While Republicans and Tea Party members have been very effective at painting this as the single biggest problem that the U.S. economy is facing and that helped them succeed in the last mid-term elections, economically, it isn't. It was always a distant second to jobs and economic growth. So the problem is we've got way too many unemployed people. Look, there's three things affect you, right, your ability to earn a living, your ability to have your investments increase in value, and your home. This isn't going to do anything for housing whatsoever. This does nothing for jobs. And in terms of investment, all this has done is cost us because of this game they've been playing in Washington."
Remarkable. A cable news guy who wasn't necessarily talking about who won or lost.
On second thought, strike that. Velshi was talking specifically about who lost.
We lost. Middle and working class Americans. We're the losers here. Not President Obama or the Democrats. And it was always going to be this way. As soon as deficit reduction and austerity became the very serious issue to tackle inside the D.C. cocktail party circuit, completely ignoring major polls showing the priorities Velshi outlined above by the way, the rest of us were pretty much screwed. We never stood a chance.
This should never have been a thing -- not now. And shame on everyone involved for getting it so brutally wrong.
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Friday, July 29, 2011

NEWS

This column sheds a different light on the issue of the wealth gap but it should still make you think

Parker: Poor are not poor because rich are rich

A just released study from the Pew Research Center reporting a record high wealth gap between whites and blacks should have been labeled "handle with care."
Because care is needed to examine the complex reality behind the fact that "median wealth of white households is 20 times that of black households...." And without care, this information will be abused and misused by those in the race business as another excuse to claim racism and demand exactly what blacks, or any of us, do not need -- more government.
And, indeed, Al Sharpton has already announced plans for protest in Washington, along with the statement: "For those who think we live in some sort of post-racial society, I have news for you: we're anything but."
For one thing, "median wealth" should not be confused with "average wealth." "Median" is simply the number right in the middle -- there are an equal number of households with higher and an equal number with lower wealth. Average wealth accounts for the actual wealth of those households and reflects the fact, not reflected in the median number, that there are a good number of well-to-do black households.
So whereas median white household wealth is 20 times higher than median black household wealth, average white household wealth is 3 times higher than average black household wealth.
The racially tinged headline obscures the deeper reality of what is driving the growing wealth gap. That is that over the period of the study, 2005-09, the gap between those with more wealth and those with less has increased for the whole country.
In fact, over this period, the gap between the most wealthy and least wealthy blacks became more pronounced than the gap between the most wealthy and least wealthy whites.
In 2005, the top ten percent wealthy black families represented 56 percent of overall black wealth. By 2009, this top ten percent represented 67 percent of overall black wealth.
You have to wonder what kind of racial claims Al Sharpton will make about this.
All this is not to minimize a genuine problem. Far more important than where black wealth stands relative to white wealth is the fact that median, or average, black wealth is far less than it should be.
That 35 percent of all black households have zero or negative wealth (net indebtedness) is dismally sad.
What to do?
If there are any public policy implications, it is not to expand government, but to remove it as obstacle to black wealth creation.
At the most basic level, black children need to get better education and this means giving black parents choice to send their children wherever they want to school.
A better-educated black population will mean a higher income earning black population. But income alone is a limited tool for creating wealth. Wealth is created through savings, investment, and entrepreneurship. And blacks lag far behind in each category.
The Pew study shows that the major destruction of wealth from 2005-09 resulted from the collapse of housing prices. Blacks suffered disproportionately because black net worth has been almost entirely in their homes.
The idea of allowing investment in a personal retirement account rather than paying the Social Security payroll tax would be a boon to building black wealth.
But when President Bush suggested the personal retirement account idea, NAACP chairman Julian Bond said this was asking blacks "to play the lottery with their future."
A life of government guarantees and controls is not a formula for building wealth. Freedom and capital markets are. Blacks need to decide which they want.
And entrepreneurship must become part of black culture. Blacks need to get that poor people are not poor because rich people are rich.
The formula for more black wealth: less government, more ownership and initiative.
(Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education (www.urbancure.org). She can be reached at parker(at)urbancure.org.)
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com)
COLUMN

NEWS

I have long felt that views on racism have been misplaced.  Most people focus on the brazen like name calling and cross burnings. While those may still exist I always belived that the acts are a lot more subtle and though there may be different theories on the wealth gaps between whites, Blacks and Hispanics I think racism plays a part in why the median wealth of whites is 20 times greater than that of Blacks.

Here is the link again: 
http://pewsocialtrends.org/2011/07/26/wealth-gaps-rise-to-record-highs-between-whites-blacks-hispanics/