The decline of middle class capital is partly
self-inflicted.
Conventional explorations of why the middle class is
shrinking focus on economic issues such as the decline of unions and
manufacturing, the increasing premiums paid to the highest-paid workers and the
rising costs of higher education and healthcare.
All of these factors have a role, but few comment on the
non-economic factors, specifically the values that underpin the
accumulation of capital that is the one essential project of middle class
households.
Daniel Bell's landmark 1976 book The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism held that"capitalism--and
the culture it creates--harbors the seeds of its own downfall by creating a
need among successful people for personal gratification--a need that corrodes
the work ethic that led to their success in the first place."
I would phrase this in the language of values and capital:
The
primary cultural contradiction of the Great American Middle Class is the
disconnect between the values needed to build capital and those of
gratification via debt-based consumption.
Accumulating capital--not just financial capital but human
and social capital-- requires a distinct set of values and soft skills:
1. Sacrifice of current consumption in favor of accumulating
capital to be invested.
2. Thrift: repairing broken items, buying used replacements,
waiting for deep discounts, etc.
3. Personal integrity and trustworthiness above all else.
One's word is one's bond.
4. Self-discipline/self-control in service of long-term
goals and the other values.
5. Humility: there is always more to learn; pride goeth
before a fall.
6. Lifelong learning: human capital is skills and
experience. Adding skills and experience takes work, focus,
accountability--what I call the eight essential skills in my
book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy.
7. Accumulating the social capital of emotional intelligence
and trustworthy collaborators.
8. Setting and achieving long-term goals: saving enough
money to buy a home or investment property with a 50% down payment, saving
enough to pay for college in cash (with the student working part-time in the
academic term and fulltime in summers), etc.
9. The desire to own productive assets rather than
unproductive bling such as luxury vehicles or a fancy home.
10. Work-family-leisure balance: avoid burnout and maintain
strong family/friends ties.
Arrayed against these capital-accumulation-disciplined
values are the consumerist values of instant gratification, short-term
horizons, lack of long-term goals, self-indulgence, impulse buying, keeping up
with the Joneses (i.e. competitive consumption), and an obsessive focus on the
social/consumption pecking order of one's peers, all of which incentivize
debt-based consumption that spends future earnings today on non-essentials.
I was astonished to read in $100,000 and up is not enough – even the 'rich' live paycheck
to paycheck that busy couples spend $2,000 to $2,600 per month eating
out. That's roughly $30,000 a year, the equivalent of a brand-new vehicle plus
a used car or one year of college--or a down payment on a rental home in a
non-bubble locale.
The article contends that "Many 'rich' people
have problems accepting that they aren’t really that wealthy and the money will
not last forever."
This is an excellent summary of the consumerist mentality:
income, wealth and financial security are all grossly over-estimated while debt
is under-estimated.
Conventional Americans may wonder how recent legal
immigrants with modest-paying jobs buy homes and pay off the mortgage in a few
years and then send their kids to university with zero student loans. In a
conventional consumerist household earning two times as much annual gross
income, this is viewed as "impossible."
The
point is the decline of middle class capital is partly self-inflicted. Yes, wages are stagnant, the
system encourages consumption, and our self-serving politicos encourage the
view that if we stop buying on credit the nation will collapse. Yes, we will
experience a recession, but that is simply the order of things when debt-based
consumption runs ahead of productivity. The nation will survive, and those who
are prepared may finally be able to buy assets at fair-market values.
We can't
change the system on our own, but we can change the way we respond to rising
inequality and insecurity: we can consume/borrow our way to poverty or we can
accumulate capital, skills, moxie and productive assets. Learning more valuable
skills is now essentially free. What it requires is a value system that
supports long-term goals, self-discipline and a desire to solve problems rather
than indulge in the self-destructive pleasures of indignation.
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