New study confirms what we figured all along -- a GOP Congress is good for the country's 1%
A GOP Congress really does make the rich richer
A new study confirms what we figured all along -- a Republican Congress is good for the country's 1 percent
BY ALEX SEITZ-WALD
Are you rich and want to get richer? Vote Republican! The stronger the GOP is in Congress, the larger the share of wealth the top 1 percent controls, according to a new study in the October issue of American Sociological Review, which confirms what we figured all along theres a direct connection between the rightward shift of Congress and the upward advance of the richest Americans net worths.
From 1949 through 2008, the impact of a 1 percentage point increase in the share of seats held by Republicans in the House (a little over five seats) raised the top 1 percents income share by about .08 percentage points. At first glance, this might seem negligible, said Thomas Volscho, a sociologist at CUNY-College of Staten Island who co-authored the study. But its not. Given that the estimated national income in 2008 was more than $7.8 trillion, an increase of only 1 percent in Republican seat share would raise the income of the top 1 percent by nearly $6.6 billion. That equates to about $6,600 per family in the top 1 percent.
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Beyond politics, Volscho and Kelly found that the decline of private-sector union membership, and the increasing financializing of the economy which has heightened the impact of financial-asset bubbles were also key contributors to income inequality and the rise of the 1 percent. Over the 60 years the paper studied, a 1 percentage point decrease in union membership among private sector workers was linked to a more than 0.4 percentage point increase in the income share of the super-rich.
But the most surprising finding of the study may be the impact a GOP Congress has on income inequality. Based on our analysis, Democrats appear to favor an economic system that produces more egalitarian outcomes even before any redistribution occurs, the study concludes. In essence, the market is not completely beyond the influence of politics and policy, and it is not just in the realm of explicit redistribution that political parties produce divergent distributional outcomes. Political decisions in part make the market.
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http://www.salon.com/2012/10/02/gop_congress_really_does_make_the_rich_richer/