by Sixstrings » Tue 31 Aug 2010, 18:01:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he elderly in America can remember a long-distant era when progressive thinkers included leaders of organized labor and small-town populist politicians. But nowadays progressive politicians and strategists tend to be affluent meritocrats who got where they are by making good grades at highly selective schools.
Their narrow personal experience leads many elite progressives to equate social mobility and increases in income with obtaining academic credentials like their own.
While New Deal labor liberals and populists wanted to promote unions and a living wage, many members of the new breed of Ivy League-educated liberal technocrats prefer an alternate plan: send everybody to college.(snip)
Progressives love to claim that education is the key to upward mobility. But this is based on an obvious fallacy. The "college premium" that results in higher incomes for college graduates is the result of the relative scarcity of college degrees. If everyone had a B.A., then the value of a B.A. in generating high wages would drop.
(snip)
Nor is there any basis to the claim, repeated by politicians and pundits of both parties, that most of the jobs of the future require a college education.
On the eve of the Great Recession, the Bureau of Labor Statistics identified the occupations with the largest numerical growth in 2008-2018: registered nurses; home health aides; customer service representatives; combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food; personal and home care aides; retail salespersons; office clerks, general; accountants and auditors; nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants; and post-secondary teachers. Of these careers, only two -- accountants and auditors, and post-secondary teachers -- require a bachelor’s degree rather than on-the-job training or an associate degree, and only one -- post-secondary teachers -- requires a graduate degree (a doctorate).
(snip)
The alternative to the mass upper-middle-class fantasy peddled by Republicans and New Democrats is a return to the older New Deal liberal approach, based on high wages and adequate social insurance. Working Americans should not need to go into debt to obtain college diplomas, in order to share more of the gains of national economic growth in the form of higher wages.
And there would be less pressure on working Americans to gamble with their money in the stock market, if Social Security, like public pensions in the rest of the world, replaced a higher percentage of pre-retirement income than the 30-40 percent it replaces today.
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/feature/2010/08/03/myth_upper_middle_classSo herein lies the dilemma for the middle class: conservative elites think everyone could own their own business if they just tried hard enough, while ignoring the reality of how difficult it is for a small business to compete head on with globalized ultra-cheap labor and corporate mega-chains.
And the progressive elites are just as out of touch -- they want to send everyone to college, while ignoring the brutal fact that the "jobs of the future" are low-paying jobs like clerks, servers, cashiers, home health aides, etc. As the article points out, the only decently paying future growth jobs are nursing and teachers. Which is surprising, since teachers are getting laid off left and right at the moment, and many more depend on federal government bailouts. As for nurses, their pay is under pressure from H1B visa immigrants.
So that's where we stand, with nobody in the political class representing the vast majority of Americans (who are working class and will always be, even if Joe the Plumbers dream of buying their boss out). Conservatives got theirs and couldn't care less anyway, and the only liberals left any more come from the ivy league and are utterly disconnected from the working class.
The Salon article is right that it didn't have to be this way. This used to be a country where the distribution of income was evenly spread out, and not outrageously skewed to the top one and five percent. This used to be a country where one working man could earn a living wage that would support his family, usually with a wife at home and therefore no need for kids in daycare or elderly parents in hellish nursing homes.
This used to be a country where a kid could just work part time and pay for classes and books without going thirty, forty thousand or more in debt. This used to be a country where homes could be paid off in twenty years and the mortgage burned, not perpetual home equity debt slavery.
Yeah I know, this place ain't what it used to be -- just wanted to rant.