May
17, 2005
Class Warfare Is Back
By Bruce
Bartlett
I don't
believe in coincidences in politics. When I see the Wall Street
Journal and New York Times both running big front-page
stories within two days of each other on a subject that isn't
remotely time sensitive, I know that something is going on. More
than likely, it signals the beginning of an organized campaign
by the liberal media to gin up an issue for the Democrats.
When a team
is on a losing streak, the best thing the coach can do is line
up a game with a cream-puff opponent. Even if the victory doesn't
mean much substantively, it can go a long way toward helping restore
his players' confidence and, hopefully, lead to victories against
tougher opponents.
When liberals
are on a losing steak, two of the issues they come back to time
and time again are racism and inequality. In the late 1980s, for
example, they all ganged up on South Africa to make its system
of Apartheid the No. 1 issue in American politics. It wasn't that
Apartheid had gotten any worse or that we had anything to do with
it. It was just an issue on which the left knew it couldn't lose
because Apartheid was indefensible. In short, Apartheid was the
cream-puff opponent that every coach wishes for in order to give
his team that easy victory they so desperately need to turn themselves
around.
The left
is on another losing streak today, and so their intellectual leaders
in the liberal media have gone back to the old playbook for an
easy win that will get their team out of its slump. This time,
it is the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer, which
has been working for them since the days of Karl Marx. But it's
getting harder and harder to milk this cow.
On Friday,
May 13, The Wall Street Journal began the first of a
series on challenges to the American dream with a page-one piece
entitled, "As Rich-Poor Gap Widens in the U.S., Class Mobility
Stalls." The essence of this article was that few people
rise above the economic class to which they were born. And compared
to the socialist nations of Europe, class mobility is no greater
here than there.
On Sunday,
May 15, The New York Times began a series saying exactly
the same thing, often quoting the same sources and citing the
same data. What do you think the odds are of that happening independently?
Zero, I think.
Here is what
I believe is going on. Class warfare has been the main staple
of leftist ideology for hundreds of years. Especially in the 1980s,
we heard over and over again in the media about how the top fifth
of households was increasing its share of aggregate income. The
implication was that the pie was fixed, so that the gains of one
group came at the expense of the rest. But conservatives effectively
demolished this argument by showing that the pie was getting larger.
The real income of all groups was increasing and everyone was
better off, even if some were more better off than others.
The left
then shifted its argument to imply that those in each income class
were essentially the same people year after year. This justified
a redistributionist tax policy even if the well being of every
income class was rising. It didn't matter that the data used to
justify this policy were before-tax incomes, meaning that even
confiscatory tax rates would have no effect on the outcome, or
that the data also omitted most welfare benefits, meaning that
practically everything government does to equalize incomes was
completely ignored.
But the strongest
argument conservatives had was data showing significant fluidity
of income. Those well-off today were often poor tomorrow, and
those born poor were often able to lift themselves into higher
income brackets. In short, the existence of income mobility utterly
smashed the liberal premise and forced a withdrawal. In the Clinton
years, the left simply ignored a continuation of the same trends
that it found so objectionable in the 1980s.
Now the left
is back flogging the same issue in hopes of getting itself back
in the win column. But first it has to cope with the reality of
mobility among income classes. Toward this end, it is trying to
redefine it. Now it is no longer whether or not there is significant
mobility -- the left concedes that point. The question instead
is whether mobility today is greater than it was in the past.
This shifts the focus away from the large level of mobility to
its change over time, thus obscuring the issue.
In future
columns, I will look at specific aspects of this new campaign
and what the true facts are. For now, just be aware that the game
is afoot.
Copyright
2005 Creators Syndicate
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