I just had a chat with an ATT office manager, a young Black man who is very attentive to his customers. After he learned that I worked with labor unions, he said, “I’ve always wanted to be in a union. My dad was a bus driver, and his earnings and benefits really took care of us. Our health care was amazing, five dollars co-pay and that was it, no matter what the medical procedure.”
His comments both made me sad and angry. He took me back a few decades, when working people still earned a decent living. That’s the period before runaway inequality and job destruction basically wiped out the American Dream for the working class.
It’s not like we can’t afford to pay people decently. The money is there and then some. In 1980, there were 13 billionaires in the U.S. In 2023 there were 801. The top one tenth of one percent saw their collective wealth jump from $1.8 trillion in 1990, to $22.1 trillion in 2024. For some context, the US federal budget in 2024 was $6.8 trillion. Or consider that there are 1975,00 bus drivers in the U.S. One trillion dollars could pay them $100,000 a year for 57 years.
Meanwhile the average worker income after inflation did not rise at all from 1977 to 2024. And as we all know, during that time health care costs have gone through the roof for nearly all of us.
To add to working-class misery there is never ending job insecurity. One in four employed workers fear they will lose their jobs within the next year, according to polling done by Colorado State University.
And there’s a very powerful connection between job loss and enriching the super-rich. In many, if not most, cases, mass layoffs are used to free up cash for companies to pour into stock buybacks – buying back the corporation’s own shares to artificially boost its price. This moves money into the pockets of the largest Wall Street stock-sellers and the companies’ CEOs, who are mostly paid with stock incentives. In a very real way workers are sacrificing their jobs to enrich the richest of the rich. (To see why mass layoffs have little or nothing to do with AI and other new technologies please see my book, Wall Street’s War on Workers.)
In our capitalist economy there has always been a fierce struggle between corporate power and worker power. But when unions represented 25 to 35 percent of the private sector, during the post-WWII era, working people had sufficient clout for most working people, like that bus driver dad, to provide a good standard of living for their families. Today, with only six percent of the private sector workforce represented by labor unions, the balance has shifted strongly towards corporate power, and wages, benefits and job security have gone backwards.
The power imbalance is so great that our conventional wisdom has changed. Our minds have been warped by corporate power. When unions were strong, runaway inequality was viewed as out and out greed. Today, we are told it’s just the result of entrepreneurial brilliance, that we all benefit from the creation of more and more billionaires, that those left behind simply lack the skills to succeed in our modern economy.
But that bus driver still drives a bus, taking people to work and the doctor or shopping, using much the same skills as generations ago. The difference today is that workers don’t have sufficient power to gain a decent standard of living. Relegated to gig work or jobs under threat of layoffs, the system is rigged against them.
Historically, working people saw the Democratic Party as the defender of the working-class. Not so today. Instead, they see politicians of both parties as just another group of elites feathering their own nests and protecting the establishment. Very few representatives are seen as willing to take on Wall Street and stop needless mass-layoffs, because apart from some occasional rhetoric we don’t see politicians fighting for workers.
The frustration, the resentment, the anger about the rigged system was building long before Donald Trump came on the scene. But there he is, a giant wrecking ball, slamming away at the established order. For those left behind, smashing the establishment feels long overdue.
Have the Democrats learned anything from Trump’s ascendency? Will they actually take on the financial barons? Or will they continue to take in the money that flows so strongly from Wall Street and Silicon Valley? The jury is out.
Looking at the Democrats’ post-election discussions, it could be a long wait until our ATT union-supporter gets a chance to join a union.
Let’s try to have a happy new year, but it is likely to be another tough one for the working class.
The financial capitalists arevjust using Trump to create a crash so they can get bail outs and buy assets
American capitalism and politics are broken.
Over the course of the history of our country political parties have come and gone. Remember the Constitutional Union Party [1860] and the Whigs [1836-1864] among several others, some good and some not so much so (i.e. radicalized and/or extremest). Perhaps both parties are deceased. Since capitalism and politics are intertwined I am commenting on both.
Perhaps we are at a point in time that we are due for another party, or two, to emerge, ones that support and champion the majority of Americans that are truly the ones that make our country and economy strong and robust. The more wealth/disposable income the masses have the stronger the economy will be. Consumption is the major driver of most all industries, presuming that they are not support mainly by government handouts/contracts/etc..
Personally, it appears quite evident to me that the striving for wealth and power are akin to being addicted to powerful drugs. There is never enough of either for those addicted.
However, without sufficient disposable income for workers the economy will ultimately fail, especially in the economic model that we are currently in. The American capitalist model is flawed and failing. We, the masses, are on the verge of becoming the equivalent of serfs. The imbalance of wealth distribution in the country cannot be sustained. Once it reaches a tipping point, where most of the population can only afford the basics of existence (vs. thriving), collapse will follow...history has shown this many times over. What comes from that is a good question.
Can/will we all come together to make positive and significant improvements? I'm not talking about tearing down the economy or eliminating individual wealth (i.e. pure socialism) [Segway- I wonder how many "titans of industry" and avowed anti-socialists will acknowledge that many corporations are beneficiaries of socialist programs in that they exist and profit only because of government "handouts", aka socialism...topic for another discussion?] We need/must have people in power politically that are not beholding to the ultra rich, individuals or corporations (which are not people and I couldn't care less what SCOTUS has to say on that...they are wrong), and have the vision required to move us in a direction that is more functional, positive, equitable and sustainable.
There is one known constant in the universe and that is CHANGE. It is inevitable and inescapable. The question is...what form will it take? Will it be positive or negative?