- Jan 12, 2005
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What right-wing ideologues continue to overlook is that growing the economy doesn't necessarily correlate with more and better jobs for the middle class. As Michael Gerson points out in his column yesterday in the Washington Post, as the American economy has grown the past 30 years, jobs have gone overseas and wages for middle class Americans have stagnated. So advocating policies that advance economic growth isn't the same as supporting policies that will advance the economic state of ordinary Americans.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...283-11e2-bfd5-e202b6d7b501_story.html?hpid=z2
And I might add, economically-growing businesses have been cutting wages and benefits, including health-care benefits.
Here's the "punch line," as it were:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...283-11e2-bfd5-e202b6d7b501_story.html?hpid=z2
The retreating economic tide also exposed some barnacled problems that had existed under the surface for a generation. As Americans have grown dramatically more productive, technology has replaced many jobs and globalization has put downward pressure on wages. So middle-class Americans work harder for stagnant incomes in an economy with fewer employment opportunities.
And I might add, economically-growing businesses have been cutting wages and benefits, including health-care benefits.
Here's the "punch line," as it were:
For Republicans, the problem runs deeper than Romneys persona. The GOPs economic message is well past its 1980 expiration date. It is not enough to promote growth in an economy where a personal benefit from overall growth is far from assured. Economic mobility is increasingly connected to education, skills and strong families. The traditional, Republican, pro-business agenda is necessary, but it does not adequately grapple with these human needs the prerequisites for personal prosperity.
Republicans like to defend economic success. They need to show more creativity in making economic advancement a realistic prospect by promoting, say, high school and college completion, or increasing the rewards for work, or providing practical help to families with children. Moving forward, the GOPs task is not only to make capitalism more efficient; it is to make capitalism work for everyone.
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