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A Year Before Lunch

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In one day, the average CEO earns more before lunchtime than a full-time minimum wage worker makes in a year.

That's the lead statistics in a new DMI Injustice Index. Just in case anyone missed the point, DMI reports that the ratio between CEO pay and the minimum wage is the highest in US history (821 to 1). And the SEC chose this moment when everyone is distracted by the holidays to reverse an earlier rule so that it will be easier to underreport CEO pay through stock options.

I understand the the guy (and it still is a guy in most companies) in the corner office gets paid more than everyone else. I'm not filled with class resentment over that fact. But I am filled with outrage over the fact that in good times and bad times, CEO salaries keep going up while workers' wages remain essentially flat.

The middle class has been hit by the one-two punch of flat wages and rising costs in housing, medical, utilities, child care, transportation, and taxes. If working stiffs and CEOs had enjoyed the same rates of increase, maybe more families could afford health insurance and even put a few dollars away in savings.

There has been endless talk about the politics of division. Pundits from both the right and the left deride politicians who use wedge issues to separate Americans. In 2000, George W. Bush appealed to middle class Americans by describing himself as a "uniter, not a divider."

But these economic divisions are real. America's bounty isn't being shared by all those who work hard to produce it.


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And what should we do about it?

Or, in the alternative,

What should we do about it?

I'm worried about the "Warren Reports" portion of this blog. I guess all the pretty, shiny things to talk about these days are over in "America Abroad" or winking out from the mutually congratulatory main posts about "The End Of Our Conservative Era." There's just nothing sexy about the decline of the middle class, is there?

Seems to me that threats to the middle class, and to the concept (and former reality) of the upward mobility that grows and sustains the middle class, are threats to the way of life we know as American.

But I don't see much action here, in the Warren Reports. And that bothers me.

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