The Bottom Dollar

 


Ownership Statistics

 

Dispossession of the Citizenry

 

Control by a Monied Minority

 

In The Pursuit of Happiness!

"This is Catholic?!"

Making the World Safe for Big Money

A Closer Look at Globalization

[Data compiled by The Shared Capitalism Institute, www.sharedcapitalism.org/]


1. Edward N. Wolff, "Recent Trends in Wealth Ownership," a paper for the conference on "Benefits and Mechanisms for Spreading Asset Ownership in the United States," New York University, December 10-12, 1998. In 1995, the financial wealth of the top one percent was greater than the bottom 90 percent.

2. Forbes 400, October 11,1999.

3. Edward N.Wolff, "RecentTrends in Wealth Ownership," ibid.The period cited was 1983 to 1995, based on the Federal Reserve's 1995 Survey of Consumer Finances.

4. Federal Reserve Bulletin, January 2000, p. 10.

5. Median household financial wealth was less than $10,000 in 1995. The $11,700 figure is based on a 12-percent growth projection in Wolff, "Recent Trends in Wealth Ownership," ibid.

6. Near Karlen,"And the Meek Shall Inherit Nothing," New York Times, July 29, 1999, p. B1.

7. See www.forbes.com.

8. Forbes 400, September 13, 1982; Forbes 400, October 11, 1999.

9. Forbes 400, October 11, 1999 (see www.forbes.com).

10. David Wessel, "U.S. Stock Holdings Rose 20% in 1998," Wall Street Journal,
March 15, 1999, p. A6.

11. Feldstein, chairman of Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, was a key architect of supply-side economics.

12. Congressional Budget Office Memorandum, Estimates of Federal Tax Liabilities for Individuals and Families by Income Category and FamilyType for 1995 and 1999, May 1998.

13. Robert Frank, Luxury Fever (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999).

14. Median earnings based on Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis data reported in State of Working America 1998-99; labor's share of non-farm business sector income based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data reported in Economic Report of the President (February 1999), at p. 384.

15. Business Week, "49th Annual Executive Pay Survey," April 19, 1999.

16. A Decade of Executive Excess: The 1990s (Boston: United for a Fair Economy and Institute for Policy Studies, 1999).

17. Steven Greenhouse, "So Much Work, So Little Time," New York Times, September, 1999, p. WKI.

18. Charles Handy, The Hungry Spirit (New York: Broadway, 1998), p. 17.

19. See www.census.gov ("income" at Table H-2).

20. Professor Edward N.Wolff cited in "A Scholar Who Concentrates...on Concentrations of Wealth," Too Much, Winter 1999, p. 8.

21. Doug Henwood, "Debts Everywhere," The Nation, July 19, 1999, p. 12.

22. Louis Uchitelle, "As Class Struggle Subsides, Less Pie for the Workers," New York Times, December 5,1999, p. BU4 (reporting on research by Professor Edward N. Wolff).

23. Issac Shapiro and Robert Greenstein, TheWidening Income Gulf (Washington, D.C.: Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, September 4, 1999), citing CBO figures.

24Homeowners are also now much more highly leveraged than in the 1980s, with down payments at record lows and mortgage levels at record highs. Lou Uchitelle, "In Home Ownership Data: A Hidden Generation Gap," New York Times, September 26, 1999, p. BU4.

25. United Nations Human Development Report 1999 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999).

26. United Nations Human Development Report 1998 (NewYork: Oxford University Press, 1998).

27. "Rich Comparison," Wall Street Journal, July 30, 1999, p. I.

28. The IMF estimates that the amount in offshore tax havens grew from $3.5 trillion in 1992 to $4.8 trillion in 1997. Other estimates put the amount as high as $13.7 trillion. See Douglas Farah, "A NewWave of Island Investing," Washington Post National Weekly Review, October 18, 1999, p. 15. Alan Cowell and Edmund L Andrews,"Undercurrents at a Safe Harbor," New York Times, September 24, 1999, p. C I.

29. The Times (London), September 23, 1999.