Originally posted by Adam Smith
As long as we are talking about personal histories, let me throw in mine. I'm 48. Dad worked, mom stayed at home. They owned a house in a good suburban school district, three bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, unfinished basement, no garage, no air conditioning (added years later), no fireplace, etc. Dad sent all three of us to the state university, bought new cars about every seven years, had no debt aside from the mortgage. Pretty similar so far, right?
How do thing look today? I do statistical work, by brother works in computer services. Neither job even existed forty years ago because changes in technology allowed the economy to gradually shift away from manufacturing and toward services.
My sister is a teacher. Her husband is a policeman. Both unionized. Pretty much middle class right? The house they own, with the same county schools we attended, has four bedroom, 2 1/2 baths, finished basement, two car garage, air conditioning, and a fireplace. The cars they own are much more expensive than what my parents had (even after accounting for inflation), but are safer, less polluting, last longer, have more features, and have a much better repair record than the cars my parents bought. (Much of the change being due to better quality Japanese imports, which reduced US jobs, but made consumers better off.)
I hope you enjoyed your rant about the GOP, but you missed the fact that the nature of the economy has shifted over time, and that as incomes rise consumers demand more and better services.
Former Senator Moynihan once argued that by far the biggest effect on families was the refusal to make welfare payments available to families in which an able bodied worker was present, since this broke up or prevented the formation of families in order to maintain welfare payments.
As long as we are talking about personal histories, let me throw in mine. I'm 48. Dad worked, mom stayed at home. They owned a house in a good suburban school district, three bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, unfinished basement, no garage, no air conditioning (added years later), no fireplace, etc. Dad sent all three of us to the state university, bought new cars about every seven years, had no debt aside from the mortgage. Pretty similar so far, right?
How do thing look today? I do statistical work, by brother works in computer services. Neither job even existed forty years ago because changes in technology allowed the economy to gradually shift away from manufacturing and toward services.
My sister is a teacher. Her husband is a policeman. Both unionized. Pretty much middle class right? The house they own, with the same county schools we attended, has four bedroom, 2 1/2 baths, finished basement, two car garage, air conditioning, and a fireplace. The cars they own are much more expensive than what my parents had (even after accounting for inflation), but are safer, less polluting, last longer, have more features, and have a much better repair record than the cars my parents bought. (Much of the change being due to better quality Japanese imports, which reduced US jobs, but made consumers better off.)
I hope you enjoyed your rant about the GOP, but you missed the fact that the nature of the economy has shifted over time, and that as incomes rise consumers demand more and better services.
Former Senator Moynihan once argued that by far the biggest effect on families was the refusal to make welfare payments available to families in which an able bodied worker was present, since this broke up or prevented the formation of families in order to maintain welfare payments.
Is it really completely the fault of the GOP? Nah. But the complex social forces that led to these changes have much more to do with conservative ideology -- especially union-busting and the decline of social entitlements -- than liberalism.
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