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pat_k

(12,663 posts)
18. And, policies that concentrate wealth in the hands of the few at the expense of the many make for a very fragile economy
Sun Nov 2, 2025, 08:13 PM
Nov 2

The top 10% account for 50% of our spending. If the market goes down and they get nervous, they can easily cut their spending 30%, 50%, or more.

For the rest of us, an overwhelming portion of our spending is on essentials. We aren't able to cut back anywhere near that much.

As our economy becomes more and more and more dependent on the wealthiest spending a lot of money, it becomes ever more fragile. Something happens that prompts them to cut way back, and we go straight into recession.

In addition, with America going ALL IN on AI, the market has become incredibly fragile.

The top 10 stocks in the S&P 500 account for 40% of the index’s market cap. Since ChatGPT launched in November 2022, AI-related stocks have registered 75% of S&P 500 returns, 80% of earnings growth, and 90% of capital spending growth. Meanwhile, AI investments accounted for nearly 92% of the U.S. GDP growth this year. Without those AI investments, Harvard economist Jason Furman noted, growth would be flat. As Ruchir Sharma concluded in the Financial Times, “America is now one big bet on AI,” adding, “AI better deliver for the U.S., or its economy and markets will lose the one leg they are now standing on.” This concentration creates fragility, and how the end begins becomes more visible.


More facts and figures with references in Prof G's recent article "How Does the End Begin"
https://www.profgalloway.com/how-does-the-end-begin/

Republicans have been intentionally building this incredibly fragile economy by steadily shoveling money at the wealthy, to make them wealthier, and keep them spending. There is NO "trickle down," only "trickle up." And now they are propping up AI with vast expenditures of our treasury dollars and by allowing a host of circular, incestuous deals that are massively and artificially inflating values.

This is a VERY bad thing for economic and political stability. We have been heading toward a breaking point of some kind for a long, long time.. I firmly believe the trump insanity is the last gasp before things seriously falls apart.

We may yet save ourselves by implementing truly transformative reforms in time, but even with that, there will be a scary time of adjustment from our current obscenely immoral and fragile economy to a more moral and robust economy.

Recommendations

6 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Thank you for the data. yellow dahlia Nov 2 #1
Hiding In Plain Sight Mr.Bee Nov 2 #2
My MAGA relatives would say, Diamond_Dog Nov 2 #3
I would tell them Mr.Bee Nov 2 #6
Well, you can imagine how they feel about FDR. Diamond_Dog Nov 2 #11
Did any of them ever stop to think Diamond_Dog Nov 2 #22
I certainly heard that line many times over the years in markodochartaigh Nov 2 #17
EVER SINCE REAGAN, (actually HWBush's CABAL) popsdenver Nov 3 #49
++++1000 Diamond_Dog Nov 3 #50
If the Republicans continue popsdenver Nov 3 #51
Median wage has been stagnant relative to productivity for 45 years. pat_k Nov 2 #4
Please supply reference links. Not disputing your excerpts, but backup documentation is needed. erronis Nov 2 #7
Oh! I beg pardon- Mr.Bee Nov 2 #9
World Economic Forum, Capital in the 21st Century, pat_k Nov 2 #10
Thank you! erronis Nov 2 #15
They've been stealing from us for decades Mr.Bee Nov 2 #12
FWIW pat_k Nov 2 #14
Regarding weakening of unions and tax law that facilitated concentration of wealth: pat_k Nov 2 #13
Republicans always talk about "redistribution of wealth". markodochartaigh Nov 2 #19
Yes, R's have been hellbent on systematically "redistributing wealth" from the hands of the many to the hands of the few pat_k Nov 2 #23
Why don't the labor unions understand these charts and data? FakeNoose Nov 3 #40
Sadly, a great deal of damage had been done by '60. pat_k Nov 3 #41
That also means that the current business model Javaman Nov 2 #5
FDR's concept of the minimum wage: Mr.Bee Nov 2 #8
And, policies that concentrate wealth in the hands of the few at the expense of the many make for a very fragile economy pat_k Nov 2 #18
I very much concur Metaphorical Nov 3 #34
And who was in charge then? Oh yeah Ronald Reagan. Initech Nov 2 #16
Yes he certainly did. Diamond_Dog Nov 2 #20
Ronald Reagan was elected president in 1980 KS Toronado Nov 2 #21
Must do more than raise the minimum wage. Inheritance tax, wealth tax, capital gains taxed higher than labor and... pat_k Nov 2 #24
Oh there's a ton of stuff we need to get done and quickly. KS Toronado Nov 2 #32
My big worry is that too few of our electeds are out there advocating for the big stuff. pat_k Nov 3 #33
A tax on spending rather than income Metaphorical Nov 3 #35
Should be at least $30 per hour MichMan Nov 2 #31
Seattle's minimum wage is 20.76 and will increase to 21.30 1/1/26 pat_k Nov 3 #42
The minimum wage as established in 1938 was 25 cents per hour MichMan Nov 2 #25
But did it have the same purchasing power? leftstreet Nov 2 #27
In 1957, J. Paul Getty was worth $2-4 billion dpibel Nov 2 #30
Raygun made munimum wage political southmost Nov 2 #26
K&R Bayard Nov 2 #28
Big corps worked to keep prices down and wages low. Klarkashton Nov 2 #29
That goes back HarryM Nov 3 #36
So glad you pointed this out. cer7711 Nov 3 #37
Minimum wage should have been indexed to inflation like Social Security. n/t Buttoneer Nov 3 #38
From the comercial. "I was drowning in debt." Hotler Nov 3 #39
TOP TEN COUNTRIES of Minimum wage chouchou Nov 3 #43
K&R BlueWavePsych Nov 3 #44
"republicans"... Godot51 Nov 3 #45
When You Say 'Republicans' Mr.Bee Nov 3 #46
"... until 1980, when it was frozen for nine years." Grins Nov 3 #47
The last Increase Before Reagan Mr.Bee Nov 3 #48
In 2025 Mr.Bee Nov 4 #52
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