It should be obvious by
now that there is a great deal of discontent in the "American Heartland".
A very substantial portion of middle America has made it quite clear that
they are dissatisfied with the political status quo, rejecting a mainstream
candidate for president. Looking at a brief paper by Michael Norton
and Dan Iriely entitled "Building a Better America - One Wealth Quintile at a Time" provides us with a look at why this happened in 2016.
In this paper, the
authors asked "regular" Americans (no doubt, including some of
Hillary Clinton's deplorables) to estimate the current distribution of wealth
in the United States and then asking them to construct wealth distributions
with what they felt was the ideal level of wealth inequality. The authors
used an online sample of 5,522 respondents from a panel of more than 1 million
Americans. The 5,522 respondents were from 47 states, had a mean age of
44.1 years, were 51 percent female and had a median household income of
$45,000. As well, in the 2004 election, 50.6 percent of respondents voted
for George W. Bush and 46 percent voted for John Kerry, very similar to the
actual popular vote in the 2004 election. To ensure consistency, the authors
provided a working definition of wealth as follows:
"Wealth, also known
as net worth, is defined as the total value of everything someone owns
minus any debt that he or she owes. A person’s net worth includes his or
her bank account savings plus the value of other things such as property,
stocks, bonds, art, collections, etc., minus the value of things like loans and
mortgages.’’
For the first part of the
study, the authors provided the respondents with three unlabelled pie
charts of wealth distributions which included the following:
1.) a perfectly equal
distribution of wealth.
2.) a distribution which
reflected the actual wealth distribution in the United States.
3.) a distribution which
fell between these two wealth distributions which actually reflected the
real wealth distribution of Sweden.
Here is what the pie
charts looked like (for the purposes of the study, the countries were not
provided to the respondents) along with the preferences as percentages:
The respondents were
then asked which nation they would rather join given a "Rawls
constraint" for determining a just society as follows:
‘‘In considering this
question, imagine that if you joined this nation, you would be randomly
assigned to a place in the distribution, so you could end up anywhere in this
distribution, from the very richest to the very poorest.’’
Here are the results:
1.) 92.7 percent of females
and 90.6 percent of males preferred the Swedish wealth distribution to that of
the United States.
2.) 90.2 percent of Bush
voters and 93.5 percent of Kerry voters preferred the Swedish wealth
distribution to that of
the United States.
3.) 92.1 percent of those
with household incomes less than $50,000, 91.7 percent of those
with household incomes between $50,001 and $100,000 and 89.1 percent of
those with household incomes more than $100,000 preferred the
Swedish wealth distribution to that of the United States.
I was rather surprised
that the Swedish wealth distribution was preferred given the distaste for
all things "socialist" by most right-leaning Americans.
In the next part
of the study, the authors asked respondents to indicate their
estimates for the actual distribution of wealth in the United States (i.e. what
percentage of total wealth was owned by each quintile (20 percent grouping) and
then indicate what distribution they felt was most ideal. Here are the
results showing the actual, estimated and ideal wealth distributions:
It is amazing to see how,
despite the reporting by the mainstream media about wealth inequality in the
United States, Americans significantly underestimate the degree of
wealth inequality in the United States. For example, respondents
estimated that the wealthiest 20 percent of Americans control 59 percent
of the nation's wealth when, in fact, they control 84 percent. When
the respondents were asked to provide their ideal wealth distribution,
they assigned 37 percent of the wealth for the top 20 percent, just under
one-third of what they currently hold.
What is fascinating about
this study is that even the wealthiest of respondents felt that a more
equitable distribution of wealth in the United States was desirable.
Here are
the conclusions of the study:
1.)
Americans significantly underestimate the wealth disparity in the United
States, suggesting that they are simply unaware of the gap.
2.) Americans hold overly
optimistic views about social mobility in the United States which may be
driving support for unequal wealth distribution since people feel that they
have the chance to move up to a wealthier quintile.
3.) Disagreements about
the causes of inequality prevent action being taken to reduce the problem.
This study clearly
demonstrates why there is such disenchantment in America's Heartland.
With the gutting of the manufacturing sector and the oil industry and the hangover remaining from the Great Recession, the odds of
"movin' on up, to the east side" (thanks
to The Jeffersons) are becoming increasingly remote, leading directly to dissatisfaction
with the political status quo. Sadly, what seems so obvious now, completely escaped the consciousness of the elite/literati in Washington (and,
for that matter, the nation's centre of commerce in the State of New York).
This became apparent with Hillary Clinton's comments about "the
deplorables" who, in fact, have only one vote to cast just like all of
America's wealthiest and they cast those votes against Ms. Clinton.
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