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During the second half of the 20th century the United States was an
opportunity society. The ladders of upward mobility were plentiful, and the
middle class expanded. Incomes rose, and ordinary people were able to achieve
old-age security.
In the 21st century the opportunity society has disappeared. Middle class
jobs are scarce. Indeed, jobs of any kind are scarce. To stay even with
population growth from 2002 through 2011, the economy needed about 14 million
new jobs. However, at the end of 2011 there were only 1 million more jobs than
in 2002. http://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cesbtab1.htm
Only 426,000 of these jobs are in the private sector. The bulk of the net
new jobs consist of waitresses and bartenders and health care and social
assistance. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, over the 9 years,
employment for waitresses and bartenders increased by 1,188,000. Employment in
health care and social assistance increased 3,087,000. These two categories
accounted for 1,000% of the net private sector job growth.
As for manufacturing jobs, they not only did not grow with the population but
declined absolutely. During these nine years, 3.5 million middle class
manufacturing jobs were lost.
Over the entire nine years, only 48,000 new jobs were created for architects
and engineers.
In the 21st century the US economy has been able to create only a few new
jobs and these are in lowly paid domestic services that cannot be offshored,
such as waitresses and bartenders.
The lack of jobs, especially high value-added, high productivity jobs, is
the reason real median household income has declined and the distribution of
income has worsened. Without rising real household income, there cannot be a
consumer economy.
In the early years of the 21st century, the Federal Reserve substituted a
rise in consumer debt to drive the economy in place of the missing rise in
consumer incomes. Low interest rates drove up housing prices, and people
refinanced their mortgages and spent the equity. The Federal Reserve kept the
economy alive by loading up consumers with debt that housing prices and
consumer incomes would soon be unable to support.
When debt and real estate prices reached unsustainable levels, the bubble
popped, and the ongoing financial crisis was upon us.
The cause of all of the problems is the offshoring of Americans’ jobs. When jobs
are moved offshore, consumers’ careers and incomes, and the GDP and payroll and
income tax base associated with those jobs, go with them. When the goods and
services produced for American markets by offshored labor are brought into the
US to be sold, the trade deficit rises, and downward pressure is put on the
dollar, pushing up domestic inflation. (On October 12, statistician John
Williams (shadowstats.com) reported that
“third-quarter wholesale inflation jumped to an annualized 6.2%.”)
Jobs offshoring is driven by Wall Street, “shareholder advocates,” the
threat of takeovers, and by large retailers, such as Walmart. By cutting labor
costs, profits go up.It is that simple. However, as a result of sending
American jobs to cheap labor countries, US consumer incomes go down. The end
result is to destroy the domestic consumer market. What would have been US
consumer income growth becomes instead profit growth for US corporations.
Keynesian economists use in their textbooks the example of how the aggregate
effect of individual saving could be the opposite of the effect intended by the
individuals. Whereas each saver seeks to improve his position by building
wealth, in the aggregate saving could exceed investment, resulting in a decline
in aggregate demand and a fall in income for all. Offshoring has the same
logic. Each corporation can expect to gain more profits from moving US jobs
offshore, but the aggregate effect is a fall in American consumer incomes and a
reduction in the American consumer market.
I have told this story many times. But policymakers, the media, and
economists seem unable to connect the dots.
Jobs offshoring has substantial implications for Social Security and
Medicare. The US has the least adequate social safety net of any developed
country. The two major components of the US social safety net are Social
Security and Medicare for the elderly. Social Security and Medicare are
financed by a payroll tax. The combined tax is 15.3% of payrolls. For the past
quarter of a century the Social Security portion of the payroll tax has built
up a surplus of over $2 trillion. Recently, the Medicare portion began running
in the red.
Right-wing Republicans, free market ideologues, and the left-wing have all
indoctrinated themselves with incorrect beliefs about Social Security and
Medicare. The right-wing claims that a safety net financed with 15.3% of
payrolls is a “Ponzi scheme” and an “unfunded liability.” If that is the case,
then so are veterans benefits, military pensions, and federal pensions, all of
which are financed by the income tax, the basis for the payroll tax.
The left-wing claims that the rich do not pay high enough payroll taxes,
because the income subject to Social Security payroll tax is capped at about
$110,000. But the benefits are also capped. Social Security is not supposed to
be an income redistribution scheme from rich to poor, and it is not supposed to
be a pension system for the rich. The pension paid is supposed to correlate
with the pre-retirement income level of the retiree. Those who had higher wages
or salaries and consequently paid more in payroll taxes receive a larger Social
Security check than those who had lower wages and salaries and paid less
payroll taxes, although there is favoritism toward the lower income earners who
receive proportionally more in respect to their payroll taxes than higher
income earners.
There is no cap on income subject to the Medicare portion of the payroll
tax. Moreover, Medicare charges a Medicare Part B premium that is deducted from
the Social Security monthly check. In addition, there is a further Part B
premium based on retirement age income. For example, someone working beyond
retirement age and making $250,000 per year pays about $3,800 in Medicare Part
B premium in addition to the Medicare portion of the payroll tax of about
$7,500. The annual premium he pays for his “free” Medicare for which he has
paid all his working life with a payroll tax is about $11,300.
Moreover, Medicare by itself is insufficient coverage. To actually have
medical coverage, those covered by Medicare have to purchase a supplementary
private policy to cover the large gaps in Medicare. Depending on the range of
coverage, a supplementary policy costs approximately $100 to $300 per month.
As the person making $250,000 per year is likely to go for the most
coverage, he will be paying about $14,900 (excluding deductions and
co-payments) per year for his “free” Medicare. This is despite having paid the
Medicare payroll tax each year of his working life. A person who made $250,000
in taxable income per year for 30 years would have paid $217,500 into Medicare
at the current Medicare payroll tax rate.
The right-wing’s notion that Social Security and Medicare are handouts, part
of the welfare state’s bread and circuses, and the left-wing’s idea that the
rich get a free ride are equally untrue.
(Note: $250,000 is the politicians’ dividing line between the rich and the
rest of us. For a person making $50,000 a year, an income five times larger can
seem rich. However, a $250,000 annual income leaves a family or person far
distant from the lifestyle of the rich. Upper middle class incomes are
generally associated with high-tax, high-cost urban areas in states with high
income taxes. After federal income and payroll taxes, state income and sales
taxes, and property taxes, what appears to many as a large income disappears.
In New York City, the federal income tax will take about 25% of the $250,000,
New York state will take about 9%, and New York City will take about 3.65%. The
combined city and state sales tax is 8.875%. The property tax is high. The
conclusion is that in New York City a $250,000 income is reduced to $125,000 or
thereabouts. Those who claim “the rich don’t pay taxes” are not talking about
$250,000 incomes.)
Social Security and Medicare have served the country well. They protect the
individual from his own mistakes, from crooked and incompetent money managers,
and from financial crises, and they protect society from the moral dilemma of
confronting large numbers of fellow citizens who through fault or no fault of
their own cannot provide for their livelihood and medical care. After the
financial scandals and crisis of the past five years, it is a stretch to
believe that any but the astute can manage their personal wealth, whether small
or large, in today’s situation of unregulated financial markets, zero interest
rates, currency uncertainty, and highly complex investment instruments with
computers programmed with mathematical models dominating equity trades.
The argument that conceptually a person could do better by investing his
payroll taxes in the stock market is a poor basis for old age security policy.
The person can do better as long as he or she doesn’t fall into the hands of a
Bernie Madoff or a Goldman Sachs, doesn’t receive zero interest on his bonds
because the Federal Reserve has to bail out the “too big to fail banks,”
doesn’t experience a decline in currency value due to monetization of enormous
federal deficits, and doesn’t experience a bear market as he approaches
retirement.
The right-wing ideologues who try to scare old age security out of existence
go on and on about rising medical costs, about an aging population living
longer, declining birthrates and a worsening ratio of workers to retirees,
about people learning to rely on handouts rather than their own means, and
about Washington’s rising unfunded liabilities.
Scare projections are designed to scare, and most are untenable. For
example, longevity was a product of rising incomes, good diet, and antibiotics.
Today only the upper crust have rising incomes. Antibiotics are wearing out
from abuse and rising immunity of bacteria. Diet is compromised in ways still
poorly understood as a result of GMOs, pesticides, herbicides, pumping chicken,
pork, and beef full of antibiotics and hormones and feeding the animals GMO
grains and also possibly infected animal byproducts, and pumping our water full
of fluoride. A variety of destructive activities and behaviors are causing
ecological damage. Longevity might have been a short-term benefit of
irreproducible conditions considering the mounting ecological damage and the
rise of superbugs, stress, and tainted food and water production.
The projection of an aging population might also be wrong. Clearly, the
post-World War II baby boomers are aging, but do the projections take into
account the legislated 1965 immigration increases plus the illegal influx from
Mexico and points south of young people with high birth rates? How can it be
that a country with allegedly 30 million illegal immigrants, whose children
born in the US are citizens, has a declining birth rate? How do we know that
the illegal population will not continue to increase?
There are so many Spanish speaking people in the US today that if a person
calls any of his utility companies, whether telephone, Internet, water,
electricity, TV, or any of his credit card companies, or his bank, he has to
select English or Spanish. Obviously, as
anti-immigration sites make clear, the US population is changing in its
national origin, and there appears to be no sign of an aging Hispanic
population. How many old Spanish speaking people do you see in the US compared
to the young?
When confronted with this apparent fact, the response is: “why will the
Hispanics pay for the aging white population?” The answer is: because they are
in the same payroll tax system and the taxes will be withheld from their wages
and salaries just as they are from everyone else’s.
It is possible that if Hispanics in the US have suffered years of hostility,
accusations, and hatred from “the ice people,” once Hispanics are sufficiently
numerous to control the legislature, assuming one still exists, or to take over
the executive branch, the only seat of power, they may in retribution cut off
the aging whites. But if so, the whites will have brought it on themselves.
Whatever the scare projections that are mustered to undermine the public
provision of old age security, the real financial danger is never mentioned.
The only significant financial danger to Social Security and Medicare is the
offshoring of American jobs and GDP. A country without a job base is without a
payroll tax base. If the only jobs that the 21st century “world’s only
superpower” economy can create are for waitresses, bartenders, and health care
and social assistance (hospital orderlies and practical nurses), payroll tax
revenues will be less than if the US still had 20 million workers and rising in
well-paid manufacturing jobs instead of 11 million.
Regardless of Medicare’s financing, the death knell for the elderly was the
legality of abortion. If the yet to be born are an insufferable burden, imagine
the cost of the elderly. As far as the state is concerned, once you stop
producing income and payroll tax revenues for the state, it is time for you to
die. Washington would rather enact euthanasia than to pay back the $2+ trillion
in the Social Security trust fund that Washington spent, leaving only
non-marketable IOUs in the account.
Readers might think that Americans would never stand for death by injection
for the elderly once the qualified age is reached. But why would they not? They
have accepted millions of aborted babies, and Americans, including the elderly,
have stood for Washington’s murder, maiming and displacement of millions of
Muslim men, women, and children in 7 countries over the past 11 years and are
yet to show any signs of remorse for their complicity in mass murder. Next
month tens of millions of Americans will vote for Mitt Romney who believes
Obama isn’t killing Muslims fast enough.
The new “Obamneycare” health legislation does have “death panels.” They are
not called that, and they do not make formal decisions to terminate lives. But
it comes to almost the same thing. Various panels, committees, or bureaucratic
departments are empowered to make decisions about “effective care.” It has long
been known that most health care costs are associated with the last year of
life. Cost and age will be elements in determining standards of care. The
greater the weight assigned to cost, the more care will be withheld. In effect,
the “effective care” panel is a “death panel.”
Prior to the advent of the new “health care” system, Medicare and or
hospitals are already shifting costs to Medicare patients. To avoid penalties
and fraud allegations for “medically unnecessary hospitalizations,” rather than
formally admit Medicare patients as inpatients, hospital administrators
classify them as outpatients “under observation.”
According to a Brown University analysis of Medicare records in 2007, 2008, and 2009, the ratio of Medicare observation patients to those admitted as inpatients rose by 34 percent.
Being classified an outpatient under observation eliminates medicare
coverages, especially for post-operative or post-accident rehabilitation care,
leaving Medicare patients with bills in the tens of thousands of dollars (AARP
Bulletin, October 2012).
Other costs are being shifted to doctors and to hospitals. Medicare pays
fixed prices for each covered procedure or test, and these prices can be as low
as half of the billed prices. During a period when costs incurred by providers
of health care have been rising, Medicare has been cutting the amounts it pays
providers.
As the payroll tax is commingled with general tax revenues, Social Security
and Medicare payroll tax collections can be diverted to other purposes and,
thus, are always subject to competing budgetary demands, such as the previous
11 years of gratuitous wars and the bailouts of “banks too big to fail,” or to
deficit reduction demands as the government consistently overspends all revenue
sources.
A national health service is the only way to control health costs and
provide the population with health care coverage. A national health system
takes the many levels of profits out of the system and also reams of compliance
and liability costs. A national health system can coexist with a private system
for those who can afford it or whose employers are sufficiently profitable to
provide it.
As Jarad Diamond reveals in his book, Collapse:
How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, societies fail, if not because of
their moral bankruptcy, then because their rulers are only capable of
short-term thinking. The future is beyond their interest. The US offshored its
economy, because it worked short-term for corporate executives (rewarded with
multi-million dollar performance bonuses), Wall Street (rewarded with profits),
shareholders (rewarded with capital gains), and politicians (rewarded with
corporate and Wall Street campaign contributions).
Incompetent free market economists confused jobs offshoring with free trade.
They said the country would and was benefiting by giving its manufacturing,
industrial, and tradable professional service jobs to China and India, that the
US was ridding itself of “dirty fingernail jobs” and would soon be flush with
highly paid high-tech jobs and highly paid financial service jobs.
None of these promises or predictions were true. Nowhere in the government’s
jobs statistics are there any of these promised replacement jobs. The
economists who provided cover for the destruction of the US economy were
rewarded by the corporations with speaking fees, grants for their university
departments, and newspaper columns paid for by corporate advertisers. Those few
who told the truth were expelled from the corporate media that Bill and Hilary
Clinton allowed to be monopolized (for campaign contributions, of course).
The future of old age security in the United States has been lost, because
the job base has been given away to foreigners in order to maximize incomes in
the short-run for the few decision-makers.
The misrepresentation of jobs offshoring as free trade has destroyed the
prospects of cities, counties, and states along with those of unions and
millions of Americans who once had a secure future. It has destroyed the
prospects of class after class of university graduates burdened with student
loans who expected to step into the jobs that have been offshored or filled by
H-1B visa holders from abroad.
The American work force has been forsaken by the corporations and by
Washington, and this means that Social Security and Medicare have also been
forsaken.
As I predicted in the early years of this new century, “the United States
will be a third world country in 20 years.” We might get there even sooner as
Washington exhausts what little is left of American wealth in gratuitous wars
in service to Israel and the US Military/Security Complex, in unaffordable
military buildups in futile hopes of establishing hegemony over China and
Russia, and in negative interest rates from the Federal Reserve’s effort to
drive up the book value of debt instruments on the balance sheets of financial
institutions.
In 1817 Percy Bysshe Shelly forecast America’s future:
“I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read,
Which yet survive, stampt on these lifeless things,
The hand that mockt them and the heart that fed:
On the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read,
Which yet survive, stampt on these lifeless things,
The hand that mockt them and the heart that fed:
On the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Writing in the October 15 online CounterPunch, John V. Walsh, relying on
charts prepared by economics professor Mark J. Perry at the University of
Michigan and blogger John Hunter, concludes that it is a myth that US
manufacturing is in decline.
Walsh says that the loss of US manufacturing jobs is due to automation, not
to offshoring. Think about this for a moment. Perry’s graph on which Walsh
relies shows the sharp drop in US manufacturing employment to be a 21st century
experience. However, automation has been around for a long time. The notion
that its effect on employment only showed up recently needs an explanation that
is not provided. The steep drop in US manufacturing employment that began in
2000 does correspond with the date at which jobs offshoring began to bite hard.
Why does automation not also affect Chinese manufacturing, especially as
most of the Chinese manufacturing technology came from the US as US
corporations offshored their production for the US market? If Chinese
manufacturing is not up to date with automation, like the US is assumed to be,
how do the Chinese, even with cheap labor, undersell US automated factories?
How did Chinese manufacturing employment increase in a mere four years by an
amount equal to the total manufacturing employment in the US?
The US Bureau of Economic Analysis shows only 11.2 million full time US
manufacturing jobs in 2010. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows 11.7
million US manufacturing jobs in 2011, down from 15.3 million in 2002.
In contrast, China, an industrial and manufacturing backwater for most of my
life, had 112 million manufacturing jobs in 2006. In a mere four years
(2002-2006), the increase in China’s manufacturing employment was as large as
today’s total employment in US manufacturing. As long ago as 2006, China’s
manufacturing employment was about 10 times the current US manufacturing
employment. The Chinese population is about 4 times larger than the US
population, but China’s manufacturing population is proportionately greater–10
times larger. Indeed, Chinese manufacturing employees almost equal the total
number of employees in all occupations in the US (Manufacturing and Technology
News, December 15, 2009).
Obviously, something is wrong with Walsh’s article or the graphs on which he
relied.
America’s manufacturing prowess cannot be found in the statistical data. The
US is primarily an exporter of Agricultural commodities. The US imports almost
twice the amount of manufactured goods as it exports. Indeed, according to the
US Census Bureau Statistical Abstract of the UShttp://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s1308.pdf
US imports of manufactured goods are 5.5 times larger than US imports of crude
oil and 4 times larger than all imports of mineral fuel. Yet, we hear about
energy dependency, not manufacturing dependency.
As of 2010 the “superpower” US economy still had a trade surplus in
airplanes and airplane parts and a small $6 billion surplus in scientific
instruments, but that is about all.
In ADP equipment and office machinery, the US exported $22.2 billion in 2010
(latest information at time of writing), down from $44.6 billion in 2000. US
imports in 2010 of ADP equipment and office machinery were $113.5 billion, or
5.1 times exports.
The US cannot even make its own clothes and shoes. In 2010 footwear imports
are 28.7 times exports.
Clothing imports are 24.6 times exports.
Electrical machinery exports were $77 billion; imports were $120 billion.
Exports of power generating machinery were $33 billion; imports were $42
billion.
Exports of television, VCRs were $21.5 billion; imports were $137 billion.
US exports of vehicles was $88 billion; imports were $179 billion.
US news reports of thousands upon thousands of discharged US workers never
cite their replacement by automation. The news story is always that the plant
is being closed and the jobs moved abroad. Any review of America’s former
manufacturing centers verifies this. Boarded up plants and cities and towns in
decline are the remains of America’s formerly world dominant manufacturing
economy.
The loss of the US post-war trade surplus in manufacturing has left the US
with a huge trade deficit. The charts on which Walsh relied left him unaware of
the fact that China has a large trade surplus with the US, and the US has a
large trade deficit not only with China but with the world.
The fact that the US has to import not only manufactured goods, but also
high-technology products from China, an inconceivable outcome during the second
half of the 20th century, is powerful testimony to the decline of the US as a
manufacturing powerhouse.
It took some doing to obscure the facts and to present the US as a rival to
China in manufacturing prowess. How did it happen?
The fault might lie in the way statistical information is collected and
presented. Apple, for example, is a US corporation. It reports its worldwide
earnings to the IRS. Its manufacturing is counted as US manufacturing as it is
a US corporation. However, Apple doesn’t produce a single computer in the US.
They are produced in China. The employment that Apple reports is in China. The
Chinese are employed by an American company, but they are not Americans. The
Chinese incomes that Apple provides do not support the American consumer market
or provide the tax base for cities and states. The Chinese incomes do not
provide ladders of upward mobility or careers for Americans.
The wages Apple pays are in China. The consumer incomes and GDP that it
generates are in China. When Apple’s computers come back to America to be sold
they come in as imports. But Apple’s manufacturing and employment are reported
as the output and employment of an American company.
When statistics and the methods by which they are compiled were put into
effect, countries did not offshore their production for their domestic markets.
Foreign investments were made for selling abroad, not for selling in the home
market. With the advent of offshoring, counting the employment and output of US
firms that are producing abroad for their domestic market as an indication of
the strength of US manufacturing is very misleading. Apple, for example, has
done more to boost China’s GDP than to boost America’s GDP. This is true of
every US corporation that offshores its production for US consumers.
In recent years the percentage of the work forces of large US corporations
that is foreign sourced has risen rapidly. Some of the overseas hiring reflects
traditional foreign investment in which a company builds abroad in order to
sell abroad, but much of the hiring reflects offshored production for US
markets.
The US has been able to survive the large trade deficits produced by jobs
offshoring, because the US dollar is the world reserve currency. Being the
world reserve currency, the US does not have to earn foreign currencies with
exports in order to pay for its imports. However, as these trade deficits
persist and the buildup of foreign holdings of dollar paper assets rises, there
is a diminishing willingness of foreigners to trade real goods and services for
financial assets denominated in a fiat currency whose value is diminishing with
the ever-growing supply.
Thus, the basic notion of globalism–that a country’s corporations can
produce goods and services in any country for home markets–is false.
Walsh is correct that China is not to blame for the decline in US
manufacturing. Offshoring is to blame, and, thus, the blame lies with US corporations,
policymakers, and the economists and financial media who shill for “globalism.”
The decision was made to sacrifice the US economy to the short-term profits of
the few. A country so poorly led can do nothing but decline.
Sign up before Midnight to watch our video,
“Biggest Ponzi Scheme in U.S. History to Crash,”
and get our daily e-letter Investment Contrarians.
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That’s a promise! And you can opt out at any time.