The deregulation, privatization, and tax cuts
Angry people are so dense. Reagen didn't cut taxes, he simplified the tax code by taking out massive amounts of loopholes. To most businesses, his "tax cuts" were tax hikes because they could no longer hide from the man with all sorts of frivolous write-offs like "loaning" their executives a brand new Mercedes every year.
Or you could just go look up the taxes:gdp ratio...
(which have helped erode our infrastructure and safety nets) has left us in a scary situation.
How less accurate can this guy get? Reagan weakened our safety nets by raising social security taxes 6 times in 8 years? Okay bro, time for a breather?
Secondly, because of Reaganomics, we have seen wages from the middle-class and lower class stagnate or fall.
Sorry, pumpkin, but the alleged stagnation happened years before Reagan, remember? The difference was people were happy again under Reagan. But you know, go on deamonizing supply-side Keynesian policy during times of high inflation because you don't understand simple concepts.
Has this been the same for the upper class? Ha! Nope. Theoretically, this isn't supposed to happen! Trickle-down, right? I mean, Mitt Romney, rich dude, is supposed to "share" his wealth by creating jobs! If he has more money, then he can afford to pay his workers more money too. This hasn't happened. And it won't happen.
Have you heard of a Lewis Turning Point? It won a Nobel prize. Labor cannot always and forever be in increasing demand. These things run in long term cycles based on market forces. But yeah, I could throw a similar temper tantrum over Obama! too.
Thirdly, this has created a very uncertain future. Many businesses are sitting on cash. I believe I read that Apple is sitting on billions and billions of cash because demand for their products hasn't reached the point for them to actually spend on to create jobs. They'd rather sit on the cash. And why not? The focus has shifted via Reaganomics from building a long-term stable business to essentially raiding a business, cutting labor, pumping up the stock value, impressing/deceiving the shareholders, and getting out asap before the company dies off.
Sitting on huge cash piles is a very prudent practice for mega-tech that are susceptible to fierce competitive forces destroying them overnight. Do you really want Apple to go out of business to a Taiwanese company and lay off hundreds of thousands of Americans overnight?
The myth that the rest of the corporations are sitting on huge piles of cash was thoroughly debunked over two years ago. If anything, they're levering up with these extremely cheap interest rats. They are greedy, after all.
Fourthly, and most importantly, without buying power the lower classes cannot dig themselves out of the hole they're in. Hence, why class mobility here in the States is one of the worst in the industrialized world. Many western European countries (and some, former USSR satellites) enjoy better class mobility than ours. Many will use globalization and technology as excuses. Foxnews is infamous for using this lame *** excuse. Doesn't Germany have to deal with globalization?
Link?
In fact, in the 70s many of these same European countries saw less economic mobility. Meaning, if you were born poor you were most likely to die poor.
I choose to celebrate such a change in fortunes. Using it to fear monger a political agenda elsewhere is beneath me.
Whereas, the USA was the "Land of Opportunity." Not since... The tables have turned. In these European countries the mobility has dramatically increased (despite the surge in globalization, immigration, and innovation/technology) while we have headed in the opposite direction. Why? Reaganomics doesn't work!!! Eroding the safety nets, workers' rights, regulation in the banking and finance industry, commodities market, and taxes, we have put our middle-class and poor at a significant disadvantage... While those at the top enjoy privilege.
Another thoroughly debunked myth. Class mobility in America is alive and well.
Is that strawman #19 burned down? I'm having a hard time keeping track.