Jordan Weissmann over at The Atlantic (see here) points us to one of the more interesting graphs in the Pew report on the middle class (see graph below, click to enlarge).
Weissmann says:
Here's the arc it captures: In the immediate postwar period, America's
rapid growth favored the middle and lower classes. The poorest fifth of
all households, in fact, fared best. Then, in the 1970s, amid two oil
crises and awful inflation, things ground to a halt. The country backed
off the postwar, center-left consensus -- captured by Richard Nixon's
comment that "we're all Keynesians now" -- and tried Reaganism instead.
We cut taxes. Technology and competition from abroad started whittling
away at blue collar jobs and pay. The stock market took off. And so when
growth returned, it favored the investment class -- the top 20 percent,
and especially the top 5 percent (and, though it's not on this chart,
the top 1 percent more than anybody).
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