Why is that graph the way it is? That graph suggests that strain on the middle class isn't due to companies "shitting on their employees." It's clear that it's because of particular buckets of increased costs, specifically health care and education.
Rising healthcare costs are a separate discussion that I'm not particularly well-equipped to give comprehensive recommendations on. But I'd argue that education costs can be lowered by actually decreasing government influence. If you privatize all student loans then enrollments in non-value add degrees will decrease as will tuition expenses.
Do you agree it's a problem that the costs of basics have increased to the point that the average American family can no longer cover them on a single salary? Assuming so, who do you support politically that might be able to do something about it?
What are you suggesting with this point? That middle-class families actually don't want to have dual careers and women want to primarily stay-at-home? Perhaps that's true -- but it's certainly not the case with any of the women that are in my social circles.
I'm suggesting that, for both moral and existential reasons, our politics ought to be centered on what's best for babies, women and the elderly; but ours is pretty close to the opposite right now. Only 28% of married mothers want to be working full-time, but more than double that actually are:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">NB: Only 28% of married moms wish to work full-time: <a href="https://t.co/DEe7gFwpTU">https://t.co/DEe7gFwpTU</a> <a href="https://t.co/W3zD0E6u8y">https://t.co/W3zD0E6u8y</a> <a href="https://t.co/14EH5EJETI">pic.twitter.com/14EH5EJETI</a></p>— Brad Wilcox (@WilcoxNMP) <a href="https://twitter.com/WilcoxNMP/status/1230716257084665857?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Policies designed to prop up single earner households, to restrict the labor supply, to discourage corporations from treating labor like just another commodity, to increase the availability of flexible part-time jobs, etc. would all be helpful. But they have no political representation in Washington because the 1% opposes them.
I just don't see what you are practically getting at with this critique. Not to be flippant, but the 50s are gone and aren't coming back. Work = religion for our generation and we need to find a way to ensure societal stability given that reality.
It's not about going back to the social structures of the 50s, which had their own problems. But that was a golden age for American labor, which laid the foundation for a broad-based prosperity which has since been largely eroded by McKinseyite management consultants and neoliberal economic policies. Our politics will continue to polarize and become more extreme until we figure out a way for the average American to feel like he's building something for his family instead of just running a rat race and using credit cards just to keep himself afloat sometimes.
Compared to their parents, millennials are more educated and are entering the work force later (on average). Yes, they do have higher student loan debt, but those households that do have graduates, are making the same or better than their parents (location neutral).
Much of that is illusory because: (1) tons of jobs that didn't require 4y degree 10-20 years ago are now demanding one, simply because they can; and (2) if you compare the average millennial's buying power versus his parents, he's definitely worse off. Where his parents were getting married, buying their first home and having their first child in their mid-20s, most millennials can't afford for to do that until their early 30s now (if they're lucky). Some of this is caused by cultural factors as well, so it's not purely economic, but it's all connected. Atomized individuals who are accustomed to defining their identities by what they consume are easy to market to, easy to control as dependent wage-earners, and easy to manipulate politically.
Transportation is more expense. But how many people are going out their and buying that used car with 100K miles and fixing it up themselves? How many know how to do basic maintenance and do it at home with their friends or kids? Instead, people opt for a lease of a new car and cycle through every few years. The average life of someone holding onto a car is 7 years. According to the EPA, the average car is designed to last for 200K miles (double of that from 1980 BTW) and is driven ~15K per year. So, in effect, people are only getting half the value out of their purchase.
That's all by design, to profit car dealers and manufacturers at the expense of consumers. Not long ago most men learned basic automotive maintenance from their dads, and could do the most common repairs in their own garages. Now every car requires a special proprietary tool to interface with the onboard computers and diagnose the issue. It's not like Americans woke up one day and thought, "You know what? I'm tired of saving money by being self-sufficient. I'd rather buy a car that's a black f*cking box and can only be repaired by a highly paid expert. I'll just have to hope he doesn't try to rip me off!" That was all done by greedy corporations, and our government let them do it.
Housing is more expensive, for a variety of reasons. But how many local governments are in a rush to cap local prices when they rely on property taxes (and their increase) to fund ever mounting pension costs?
Figure it out? A government that can't even provide affordable housing for its people because there's no solution that the plutocrats find appealing deserves to be burned to the ground.
Yes women are working more, some willingly and some begrudgingly. Women are now more educated then men and Mill. women are 2X more likely to be the bigger breadwinner in a relationship.
That's not a good thing! The vast majority of women want to marry and have children. In an economy where men are less educated and have worse employment prospects across the board, there are far too few eligible bachelors to go around, marriage rates drop and
everyone suffers (especially women who have to struggle as single moms, and children who have to grow up without a dad).
There is just so much to this that I just think it's impossible to accurately paint with a broad brush. I also think given the circumstance of timing and life choices, it's far too early to wave our hands and say the system has failed my generation.
A society that can't be bothered to reproduce itself reliably is signing its own death warrant. I'm just sick to death of people parroting Mercatus talking points about how ours is the best of all possible political-economies (despite mounting evidence to the contrary), and that reforms are simply impossible because a few people are making disgusting amounts of money off the status quo. You secure stable family formation
first via widespread access to affordable basics, and then you can allow the oligarchs to chase the profit motive within certain boundaries. But we've allowed ourselves to become governed by a ruthlessly self-interested merchant class that recognizes no form of
noblesse oblige (and has absolutely garbage fucking taste, but that's another topic); that's got to change.