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American class immobility { December 1 2003 }

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   http://yahoo.businessweek.com/magazine/content/03_48/b3860067_mz021.htm

http://yahoo.businessweek.com/magazine/content/03_48/b3860067_mz021.htm

DECEMBER 1, 2003

SOCIAL ISSUES

Commentary: Waking Up From The American Dream
Dead-end jobs and the high cost of college could be choking off upward mobility


There has been much talk recently of the "Wal-Martization" of America, a reference to the giant retailer's fervent attempts to keep its costs -- and therefore its prices -- at rock-bottom levels. But for years, even during the 1990s boom, much of Corporate

America had already embraced Wal-Mart-like stratagems to control labor costs, such as hiring temps and part-timers, fighting unions, dismantling internal career ladders, and outsourcing to lower-paying contractors at home and abroad.

While these tactics have the admirable outcome of holding down consumer prices, they're costly in other ways. More than a quarter of the labor force, about 34 million workers, is trapped in low-wage, often dead-end jobs, according to a new book entitled Low-Wage America: How Employers Are Reshaping Opportunity in the Workplace. Many middle-income and high-skilled employees face fewer opportunities, too, as companies shift work to subcontractors and temp agencies and move white-collar jobs to China and India.

The result has been an erosion of one of America's most cherished values: giving its people the ability to move up the economic ladder over their lifetimes. Historically, most Americans, even low-skilled ones, were able to find poorly paid janitorial or factory jobs, then gradually climb into the middle class as they gained experience and moved up the wage curve. But the number of workers progressing upward began to slip in the 1970s, when the post-World War II productivity boom ran out of steam. Upward mobility diminished even more in the 1980s as globalization and technology slammed blue-collar wages.

MANY EXPERTS expected the trend to reverse as productivity rebounded during the heated economy of the 1990s. Certainly, there were plenty of gains. The long decline in pay rates turned around as supertight labor markets raised the wages of almost everyone. College enrollment boomed, too, and home ownership shot up, extending the American dream to more families. Low interest rates and higher wages allowed even those on the bottom to benefit. There was even a slight decline in the ranks of the very poorest families, as measured by asset wealth -- those with a net worth of less than $5,000 -- according to a study by New York University economics professor Edward N. Wolff.

But new research suggests that, surprisingly, the best economy in 30 years did little to get America's vaunted upward mobility back on track. The new studies, which follow individuals and families over many years, paint a paradoxical picture: Even as the U.S. economy was bursting with wealth in the 1990s, minting dot-com millionaires by the thousands, conventional companies were cutting the middle out of career ladders, leaving fewer people able to better their economic position over the decade.

During the 1990s, relative mobility -- that is, the share of Americans changing income quintiles in any direction, up or down -- slipped by two percentage points, to 62%, according to an analysis of decade-long income trends through 2001 by Jonathan D. Fisher and David S. Johnson, two economists at the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While two points may not sound like much, it's bad news given how much progress might have been made amid explosive growth. Essentially, says University of Chicago economics professor and Nobel laureate James J. Heckman, "the big finding in recent years is that the notion of America being a highly mobile society isn't as true as it used to be."

In fact, according to a study by two Federal Reserve Bank of Boston economists that analyzed families' incomes over three decades, the number of people who stayed stuck in the same income bracket -- be it at the bottom or at the top -- over the course of a decade actually increased in the 1990s. So, though the boom lifted pay rates for janitors and clerks by as much as 5% to 10% in the late 1990s, more of them remained janitors or clerks; fewer worked their way into better-paying positions. Imelda Roman, for one, makes about $30,000 a year as a counselor at a Milwaukee nonprofit -- barely more than the $27,000 or so, after inflation adjustments, that the 33-year-old single mom earned as a school-bus driver more than 10 years ago. Says Roman, who hopes to return to college to improve her prospects: "It's hard to find a job with a career ladder these days, and a B.A. would be an edge."

What Roman faces is an economy that is slowly stratifying along class lines. Today, upward mobility is determined increasingly by a college degree that's attainable mostly by those whose parents already have money or education. "It's clear that unless you go to college, you can't achieve a high trajectory in life. Education is the key to success in America today," says Aramark Corp. CEO Joseph Neubauer. He gives scholarship money to hundreds of disadvantaged kids every year through the Horatio Alger Assn., a group of successful Americans who try to help others make it, too.

THE GAP in advancement shows up clearly in longitudinal studies such as Wolff's and the Boston Fed's, which track the same people over many years. These give a better picture of long-term economic mobility than the annual government surveys of wages and incomes, since even highly educated employees usually start at the bottom and work their way up the economic ladder.

For mobility to increase in relative terms, which is the standard way economists measure it, someone has to move down the pecking order to make room for another to move up. But the Boston Fed study found less movement in both directions. Some 40% of families didn't change income brackets over the decade, vs. 37% in the 1980s and 36% in the 1970s, according to the authors' analysis of annual longitudinal surveys by the University of Michigan.

The changing dynamic of the U.S. economy clearly has the most impact on those at the bottom. Some 49% of families who started the 1970s in poverty were still stuck there at the end of that decade, the Boston Fed study found. During the 1990s, the figure had jumped to 53%, even after accounting for two-earner families. A key reason lies with the creation of millions of jobs that pay less than a poverty-line wage of $8.70 an hour, according to Low-Wage America, a massive research project involving case studies by 38 academics. Most of the workers, such as nursing assistants or food preparers, "have no educational credentials beyond a high school diploma," the authors found.

Problem is, that all-important sheepskin is out of reach for most students from low-income families. Although college enrollment has soared for higher-income students, more children from poor families can only afford to go to community colleges, which typically don't offer bachelor's degrees. The number of poor students who get a degree -- fewer than 5% in 2001 -- has barely budged in 30 years, according to an analysis of Census Bureau data by Thomas G. Mortenson, who publishes an education newsletter from Oskaloosa, Iowa.

In turn, the lack of mobility for those who don't or can't get a degree is putting a lid on the intergenerational progress that has long been a mainstay of the American experience. Last year, Wichita State University sociology professor David W. Wright and two colleagues updated a classic 1978 study that looked at how sons fared according to the social and economic class of their fathers. Defining class by a mix of education, income, and occupation, they found that sons from the bottom three-quarters of the socioeconomic scale were less likely to move up in the 1990s than in the 1960s. Just 10% of sons whose fathers were in the bottom quarter had made it to the top quarter by 1998, the authors found. By contrast, 23% of lower-class sons had done so by 1973, according to the earlier study. Similarly, only 51% of sons whose fathers belonged to the second-highest quarter equaled or surpassed the economic standing of their parents in the 1990s. In the 1960s, 63% did.

That's the pattern Michael A. McLimans and his family follows. Now 33, with two young children, the New Holland (Pa.) resident has spent the past decade working at pizza chains such as Domino's and Pizza Hut (YUM ). He made it to assistant manager but found that he could earn more, $9 to $12 an hour with tips, as a delivery driver. He and his wife, a hotel receptionist, pull down about $40,000 a year -- far from the $60,000 Michael's father, David I. McLimans, earns as a veteran steelworker. "I save every dime I can so my kids can go to college, which neither of us can afford to do," says Michael.

INCREASINGLY, the story's the same for immigrants, who have been the most celebrated symbols of U.S. mobility. But compared with immigrants in the 1960s and '70s, a larger share of newcomers today are high school dropouts, including hundreds of thousands of poor villagers from Mexico. They encounter a plentiful job market that pays better than the one they left behind -- but find fewer paths to a middle-class lifestyle, according to several recent studies. Over the long term, the spread between immigrant and native-born incomes is about three times greater today than it was a century ago, according to Harvard University sociology professor Christopher Jencks. Says Harvard economics professor George J. Borjas: "If you come here as an adult, it's very hard to get more education, which is the only way to get ahead today."

Restoring American mobility is less a question of knowing what to do than of making it happen. Experts have decried schools' inadequacy for years, but fixing them is a long, arduous struggle. Similarly, there have been plenty of warnings about declining college access, but finding funds was difficult even in eras of large surpluses. One radical approach: that college be treated the way high school is, as a public good paid for by taxpayers. Presidential candidate Senator John Edwards (D-N.C.) has proposed making the first year's tuition free at all community and public colleges for any student willing to work 10 hours a week. That may never happen, but clearly, if the U.S. couldn't shake off a creeping rigidity in the best of times, it will take a conscious change to reverse course now.

By Aaron Bernstein

Copyright 2000-2003, by The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved.



2001-crash
2002-early-fall
2002-wrapup
2003
2004
2005
2006-jan-aug
2006-sep-dec
2007-aug-dec
2007-jan-may
2007-jun-jul
2008-jan-may
2008-jun-jul
jobs
real-estate
vet-benefit-cuts
2002 worst 25 years { December 31 2002 }
Adjustable rate mortgages will be time bomb for low income { July 25 2004 }
American class immobility { December 1 2003 }
Americans income shrank for two years { July 29 2004 }
Americans overworked since 1950
Americans spend all and save lowest since 1930s { February 1 2007 }
Americans wages reduced in 2005 { January 19 2006 }
Americans work ninie weeks more than europeans { August 2 2005 }
Budget deficit over 2 trillion 2004 { September 7 2004 }
Buffet lashes out against derivatives
Bugget disarm derivatives now { March 5 2003 }
Bush aide says outsourcing a good thing
Bush blames economy on tv war coverage { August 2 2003 }
Cities face more hungry homeless { December 14 2004 }
Controversial overtime rules take effect { August 23 2004 }
Corporate profits overshadow wages in GDP { August 28 2006 }
Cost of insuring workers health increases 11 perc { September 10 2004 }
Defense spending drops buy america { January 4 2006 }
Depend japan { December 22 2001 }
Disposable worker conditions
Fast food classified as manufacturing job { February 20 2004 }
Future chronic deficits { May 28 2003 }
Gold 6yr high { January 7 2003 }
Greenspan urges cuts in social security { February 26 2004 }
Greenspan war threat hurts economy { February 11 2003 }
Greenspan warns natural gas outlook { June 11 2003 }
Greenspan warns of retirement benefit cuts { August 28 2004 }
Half americans will use food stamps { August 25 2004 }
Health insurance costs rise faster than wages { September 28 2004 }
High class families outpacing incomes state by state { January 26 2006 }
Homeless vets 500 000 year
Income gap between black and white grows { October 2007 }
Inflation deflation yes
Larouche brings message of financial doom { May 14 2004 }
Long communtes dragging american economy { July 28 2006 }
Long heightened terror alerts too expensive { August 4 2004 }
Long working hours erode family life { September 3 2004 }
Mcdonalds first loss
Mcdonalds suffers losses
Minimum wage unable to pay rent in america
More blacks extreme poverty { May 1 2003 }
One third homeless veterans { August 31 2003 }
Outsourcing doubled in last four years
Over million more americans in poverty uninsured
Pentagon to end buy american { May 22 2003 }
Permanent jobs are elusive { October 11 2004 }
PublicRadio MarketPlace 5 12 2006 inflation [mp3]
Report calls US healthcare expensive and inefficient { May 15 2007 }
Report says 10 thousand work in forced labor { September 25 2004 }
Returning troops have lost their jobs { August 16 2004 }
Rich poor income gap widens { January 27 2006 }
Savings rate lowest since great depression
Sector change from aerospace to retail hubs { December 24 2004 }
Senate gop blocks minimum wage hike { July 12 2003 }
Shooting messenger { January 3 2003 }
Small indiana town in political fight over outsourcing { April 4 2004 }
States 40b 2003 deficit
United states lost 1 5m jobs to china in 14 years
Us economy pot porn over corn { May 2 2003 }
US high in UN child poverty table { March 1 2005 }
Us japan bubble { October 2 2002 }
US trade deficit tops half trillion as farming imported
Working poor struggle to make ends meet { May 3 2004 }

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