As the Bush Regime outfits B-2 stealth bombers with 30,000
pound monster "bunker buster" bombs for its coming attack on
Iran, the US economy continues its 21st century decline. While profits soar for
the armaments industry, the American people continue to take it on the chin.
The latest report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows
that the real wages and salaries of US civilian workers are below those of five
years ago. It could not be otherwise with US corporations offshoring good jobs
in order to reduce labor costs and, thereby, to convert wages once paid to
Americans into multi-million dollar bonuses paid to CEOs and other top
management.
Good jobs that still remain in the US are increasingly
filled with foreign workers brought in on work visas. Corporate public
relations departments have successfully spread the lie that there is a shortage
of qualified US workers, necessitating the importation into the US of
foreigners. The truth is that the US corporations force their American
employees to train the lower paid foreigners who take their jobs. Otherwise,
the discharged American gets no severance pay. [See, for example, BofA:
Train your replacement, or no severance pay for you By David
Lazarus, San Francisco Chronicle, 2006 ]
Law firms, such as Cohen & Grigsby, compete in marketing
their services to US corporations on how to evade the law and to replace their
American employees with lower paid foreigners. As Lawrence
Lebowitz, vice president at Cohen & Grigsby, [send him mail] explained in the law firm�s marketing
video, "our goal is clearly, not to find a qualified and interested US
worker."
Meanwhile, US colleges and
universities continue to graduate hundreds of thousands of qualified
engineers, IT professionals, and other professionals who will never have the
opportunity to work in the professions for which they have been trained.
America today is like India of yesteryear, with engineers working as
bartenders, taxi cab drivers, waitresses, and employed in menial work in dog
kennels as the offshoring of US jobs dismantles the ladders of upward mobility
for US citizens.
Over the last year (from June 2006 through June 2007), the
US economy created 1.6 million net private sector jobs. As Charles
McMillion of MBG Information Services
reports each month, essentially all of the new jobs are in low-paid domestic
services that do not require a college education.
The category, "Leisure and hospitality,"
accounts for 30 percent of the new jobs, of which 387,000 are bartenders and
waitresses, 38,000 are workers in motels and hotels, and 50,000 are employed in
entertainment and recreation.
The category, "Education and health services," accounts
for 35 percent of the gain in employment, of which 100,000 are in educational
services and 456,000 are in health care and social assistance, principally
ambulatory health care services and hospitals.
"Professional and technical services" accounts for
268,000 of the new jobs. "Finance and insurance" added 93,000 new
jobs, of which about one-quarter are in real estate and about one-half are in
insurance. "Transportation and warehousing" added 65,000 jobs, and
wholesale and retail trade added 185,000.
Over the entire year, the US economy created merely 51,000
jobs in architectural and engineering services, less than the 76,000 jobs
created in management and technical consulting (essentially laid-off white
collar professionals).
Except for a well-connected few graduates, who find their
way into Wall Street investment banks, top law firms, and private medical
practice, American universities today consist of detention centers to delay for
four or five years the entry of American youth into unskilled domestic
services.
Meanwhile, the rich are getting much richer and luxuriating
in the most fantastic conspicuous consumption since the Gilded Age. Robert
Frank has dubbed
the new American world of the super-rich "Richistan."
In Richistan there is a two-year waiting list for $50
million 200-foot yachts. In Richistan Rolex watches are considered Wal-Mart
junk. Richistanians sport $736,000 Franck Muller timepieces, sign their names
with $700,000 Mont Blanc jewel-encrusted pens. Their valets, butlers (with
$100,000 salaries), and bodyguards carry the $42,000 Louis Vitton handbags of
wives and mistresses.
Richistanians join clubs open only to those with $100
million, pay $650,000 for golf club memberships, eat $50 hamburgers and $1,000
omelettes, drink $90 a bottle Bling mineral water and down $10,000
"martinis on a rock" (gin or vodka poured over a diamond) at New
York�s Algonquin Hotel.
Who are the Richistanians? They are CEOs who have moved
their companies abroad and converted the wages they formerly paid Americans
into $100 million compensation packages for themselves. They are investment
bankers and hedge fund managers, who created the subprime mortgage derivatives
that currently threaten to collapse the economy. One of them was paid $1.7 billion
last year. The $575 million that each of 25 other top earners were paid is
paltry by comparison, but unimaginable wealth to everyone else.
Some of the super rich, such as Warren Buffet and Bill
Gates, have benefited society along with themselves. Both Buffet and Gates are
concerned about the rapidly rising income inequality in the US. They are aware
that America is becoming a feudal society in which the super-rich compete in
conspicuous consumption, while the serfs struggle merely to survive.
With the real wages and salaries of American civilian
workers lower than five years ago, with their debts at all time highs, with the
prices of their main asset -- their homes -- under pressure from overbuilding
and fraudulent finance, and with scant opportunities to rise for the children
they struggled to educate, Americans face a dim future.
Indeed, their plight is worse than the official statistics
indicate. During the Clinton administration, the Boskin Commission rigged the
inflation measures in order to hold down indexed Social Security payments to
retirees.
Another deceit is the measure called "core
inflation." This measure of inflation excludes food and energy, two large
components of the average family�s budget. Wall Street and corporations and,
therefore, the media emphasize core inflation, because it holds down cost of
living increases and interest rates. In the second quarter of this year, the
Consumer Price Index (CPI), a more complete measure of inflation, increased at
an annual rate of 5.2 percent compared to 2.3 percent for core inflation.
An examination of how inflation is measured quickly reveals
the games played to deceive the American people. Housing prices are not in the
index. Instead, the rental rate of housing is used as a proxy for housing prices.
More games are played with the goods and services whose
prices comprise the weighted market basket used to estimate inflation. If beef
prices rise, for example, the index shifts toward lower priced chicken.
Inflation is thus held down by substituting lower priced products for those
whose prices are rising faster. As the weights of the goods in the basket
change, the inflation measure does not reflect a constant pattern of
expenditures. Some economists compare the substitution used to minimize the measured
rate of inflation to substituting sweaters for fuel oil.
Other deceptions, not all intentional, abound in official US
statistics. Business Week�s June 18 cover story [The
Real Cost Of Offshoring, by Michael Mandel] used the recent important
work by Susan N.
Houseman to explain
that much of the hyped gains in US productivity and GDP are "phantom
gains" that are not really there.
Other phantom productivity gains are produced by
corporations that shift business costs to consumers by, for example, having
callers listen to advertisements while they wait for a customer service
representative, and by pricing items in the inflation basket according to the
low prices of stores that offer customers no service. The longer callers can be
made to wait, the fewer the customer representatives the company needs to
employ. The loss of service is not considered in the inflation measure. It
shows up instead as a gain in productivity.
In America today, the greatest rewards go to investment
bankers, who collect fees for creating financing packages for debt. These
packages include the tottering subprime mortgage derivatives. Recently, a top
official of the Bank of France acknowledged
that the real values of repackaged
debt instruments are unknown to both buyers and
sellers. Many of the derivatives have never been priced by the market.
Think of derivatives as a mutual fund of debt, a combination
of good mortgages, subprime mortgages, credit card debt, auto
loans, and who knows what. Not even institutional buyers know what they are
buying or how to evaluate it. Arcane pricing models are used to produce values,
and pay incentives bias the assigned values upward.
Richistan wealth may prove artificial and crash, bringing an
end to the new Gilded Age. But the plight of the rich in distress will never
compare to the decimation of America�s middle class. The offshoring of American
jobs has destroyed opportunities for generations of Americans. Never before in
our history has the elite had such control over the government. To run for
national office requires many millions of dollars, the raising of which puts
"our" elected representatives and "our" president himself
at the beck and call of the few moneyed interests that financed the campaigns.
America as the land of opportunity has passed into history.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow�s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.