We have a leaky shower. It trickles down all day. I tried to fix it, but failed. So, the trickle lasts as a monument to my faulty plumbing skills.
But I’m not calling a plumber. Not that I expect my skills to improve any time soon, but money’s just too tight right now. I’m hoping for some extra money to come in soon, but until then I will have to wait.
But I’m not calling a plumber. Not that I expect my skills to improve any time soon, but money’s just too tight right now. I’m hoping for some extra money to come in soon, but until then I will have to wait.
However, my trickling shower helped me realize why trickle
down economics will never work.
Leaky showers, delayed repairs, doing without are often the
reality of the middle class.
Being middle class means you have enough to live
comfortably. You can have a home and a car, usually by making payments on
long-term loans. You have enough food and clothing for your family. You can pay
for utilities, digital television and even for a fun night out now and then.
And then there’s the activities for kids – sports and youth
groups, school fundraisers, Super Saturdays and summer camps – small amounts of
money that add up to a sizable pile by the end of the year.
If we had a little more money, we would put it away for
vacations or college funds for our kid’s futures.
Don’t get me wrong. This is a good life. And we do what
we can for our families, for our kids. But the reality of the middle class is
living on a budget. You make sure you have enough to pay for the essentials,
and you figure out how to get those little extras that make life worthwhile for
you and your kids.
But living on a budget also means doing without a lot of
things on your wish list.
Being poor means struggling to get those essentials and
rarely getting those little extras. The wish list is often nothing more than a
wish.
But what the poor and the middle class have in common is
that a little extra money would be put to use.
And that is a trait that we don’t share with the super
wealthy.
A little extra money for us would probably first go to
paying any essentials that aren’t covered, then would go to a growing wish list
of items – fixing the shower, putting more work into the house, getting my
eyeglasses updated, maybe even replacing that tooth I lost two years ago.
We all have our wish lists, whether we are middle class or
poor.
Fulfilling those wish lists would mean hiring contractors, going
shopping, making dental appointments, booking vacations, starting college funds
and looking at possible schools.
So, as the money available increases, there’s paying for
what we need, then there’s paying for what we would like, and then there’s
paying those things that we think would make us happy. (Of course, money
doesn’t buy you happiness, but that’s another story.)
Still, each item on that list puts more money into the
pocket of someone else in the middle class. That is the engine that spurs on an economy.
Now, how does making more money available to the super rich
help drive the economy?
They’ve already paid for their essentials, they’ve already
checked off everything on their wish list, they bought the things they think
will make them happy, and they’ve probably paid off their children’s college
education when they were toddlers.
What would extra money mean for them?
“Oh, look dear, we got a tax rebate,” says Mrs. Romney. “Now we can finally build that new
stable for our dressage horse that we’ve been putting off.”
C’mon. If they wanted to fix a leaky shower or build a new
stable, they would have built it. They aren’t waiting for extra money from
their taxes before they spend their wealth.
Where does that extra money for the rich go? Investments.
How does that help drive the engine of the economy, hire
plumbers, roofers, carpenters, and pay for dentists, opticians and tree surgeons?
Not only that, but it is this culture of pursuing more wealth
through investments that created such entities as Bain Capital, which used its
financial power to acquire companies, suck them dry of assets and put all the
employees out of work. That’s called “harvesting” as Mitt Romney put it in a video
from the 80s.
I’m not against investments, but I am against an economic
policy that only serves a group of people who are more concerned with their
investments and maintaining their personal wealth than with rebooting this
economy.
It is disappointing that trickle down economics – a principle that started
under Ronald Reagan in the 1980s – has not yet been sufficiently debunked, and
that a major political party is still promoting it.
Let me debunk it for you. I think I’ve laid out the
groundwork.
Keeping taxes low for the poor and middle class:
Would allow – say – at least 100 million households to hire contractors
or use the services of a small business. Those contractors and other small
businesses would then be able to expand their operations and put more money
into the economy. That's 100 million homes that are motivated to spend their money.
Keeping taxes low or cutting taxes for the 1 percent:
Gives the wealthy – say 3 million households – no driving
incentive to spend that money to hire more contractors, use small business or
create jobs. It just gives them more money. That's zero homes given a new incentive to spend their money.
Think about it. Whose policy will really reboot the economy?