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Transcript
Has the American Dream Been
Stolen?
Athens to New York
Spring, 1999
Prof. Kim Pearson
Outline
Who Stole The American Dream? The
Series and the Controversy
 What has happened?
 The Evolution of Capitalism
 Current Issues

Who Stole The American
Dream? The Series



1996 series
Followed 1990 series
-- “America: What
Went Wrong”
Both became books
Who Stole the American
Dream? Major Claims
American middle class is shrinking while
ranks of rich and poor are growing
 Major cause is export of high-paying
manufacturing jobs, increase of lowerpaying, less stable service jobs
 U.S. tax and trade policy favors this
trend, in effort to assist US corporations

The Controversy
Critics contend that Bartlett and Steele’s
reporting was biased; ignored the good
 Also contend that Bartlett and Steele’s
reporting failed to take into account the
realities of the global economy
 Supporters argue that government and
society should be more concerned
about the losers in the current
economic transformation

What has happened?
Shift from industrial to global
information economy, booming markets
 Decline in US manufacturing jobs
 Few jobs available for unskilled/lowskilled workers that support a family
 Shortage of skilled workers
 Labor union membership in decline
 Two-income households the norm

An Old Debate: The Evolution
of Capitalism



Adam Smith
Thomas Malthus
David Ricardo




Karl Marx
John Maynard
Keynes
Arthur Laffer
Robert Reich
Adam Smith
1776: Wealth of Nations; first
description of capitalism
 Pre-industrial revolution
 Core concepts: free market, supply and
demand, free trade
 Believed “invisible hand” would ensure
fairness
 Ignored caste differences and other
artificial barriers

Thomas Malthus




1766-1834, a cleric
Published Essay on
the Principle of
Population, 1798
Argued: Population
rises faster than
food supply; must
cut birth rate
Critics cite history of
growth
David Ricardo



1772-1823, tycoon
Went in to business
at 14, retired rich at
42
Iron Law of Wages:
Analyzed effects of
markets on wages;
argued against
government role
Karl Marx



Work influenced by
Dickensian world of
the 1850s
A theory of history
that was translated
into an ideology
Declared, to his
dying day, “I’m not a
Marxist.”
Karl Marx



Progress comes
from expanding the
ownership of the
means of production
When workers
control the means of
production, classes
will disappear
Capitalism can
reinvent itself
John Maynard Keynes
Studied “boom-bust” cycle of business
 Businesses fail when demand is
inconsistent.
 Government can “prime the pump”
when business is slow by cutting taxes
and spending more
 This was rationale behind “New Deal”
policies during the Depression

Arthur Laffer


1974: Argued that
excessive tax rates
can actually
decrease revenue
Rationale for Reagan
tax cut
Robert Reich



Former Labor
Secretary under
Clinton
Critic of “Corporate
Welfare”
Argues for
investments in
worker education,
retraining
Conclusions: It’s a Small World
After All
Free market capitalism no longer exists
 All industries are global, not national
 While Mathus’ nightmare never
materialized, sustainability is a real
issue for the whole planet
 Increasing dependence on technology
makes the issues of education and
equity more critical than ever.
