General Briefing
As we’ve been noting, corporate profits have made it back to their pre-recession heights (even if corporate tax revenue hasn’t followed suit). In fact, in 2011, corporate profits hit their highest level since 1950. But as Bloomberg News noted today, this hasn’t translated into wage growth or more purchasing power for workers:
Companies are improving margins and generating profits as wage growth for the American worker lags behind the prices of goods and services…While benefiting the bottom line for businesses, the decline in inflation-adjusted wages bodes ill for the sustainability of economic growth as consumers may eventually be forced to cut back. […]
Of the 394 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index that have reported since Jan. 9, earnings for the quarter ended Dec. 31 increased 5.1 percent on average and beat analyst estimates by 3.2 percent. Some 70 percent of the companies have posted better-than-projected results.
This pattern has become all too familiar during the slow economic recovery. In fact, real wages fell in 2011, despite record corporate profits. “There’s never been a postwar era in which unemployment has been this high for this long,” explained labor economist Gary Burtless. “Workers are in a very weak bargaining position.”
Between 2009 and 2011, 88 percent of national income growth went to corporate profits, while just 1 percent went to wages, a stat that is “historically unprecedented.”
THIS is how money gets concentrated at the top.
It’s also why people aren’t convinced that the economy is getting any better. (And then the Republicans attack Obama for it.)
I didn’t think about that angle! So. Freaking. True!!!!
No. I tried, but I’m really not surprised.
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As we’ve been noting, corporate profits have made it back to their pre-recession heights (even if corporate tax revenue...
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mindbabies reblogged this from abaldwin360 and added:
And how many of these companies laid off a significant chunk of their workforce during the recession? That means fewer...
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(source for unemployment number)
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This is why the whole “big corporations are job creators” argument doesn’t actually pan out. Big corporations may...
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generalbriefing reblogged this from abaldwin360 and added:
No. I tried, but I’m really not surprised.
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I didn’t think about that angle! So. Freaking. True!!!!
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It’s also why people aren’t convinced that the economy is getting any better. (And then the Republicans attack Obama for...
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