A policy statement from the Economic Policy Institute ("What's wrong with the economy?" included the following numbers:
This is the trend. At this rate we are not going to survive our "recovery." Remember, we've added trillions of dollars in new debt to get here.Inflation-adjusted hourly and weekly wages are below November 2001.
Median household income (inflation-adjusted) has fallen five years in a row, from $46,129 in 1999 to $44,389 in 2004.
The inflation-adjusted debt of U.S. households has risen 35.7% over the last four years.
The number of people living in poverty has increased by 5.4 million since 2000.
More than 3 million manufacturing jobs have been lost since January 2000.
The personal savings rate is negative for the first time since WWII.
Private sector jobs are up a miserable 0.8%. (If this is a recovery, it doesn't quack like one. Never before has a recovery produced less than 6.0% job growth over the same time span.)
Households health care bills rose 43-45% for married couples with children, single mothers, and young singles from 2000 to 2003.
Nearly 3.7 million fewer people had employer-provided insurance in 2004 than in 2000.
Oh, the good news?
35% of the growth of total income in the corporate sector has been distributed as corporate profits, far more than the 22% in previous periods.
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