According to Forbes, "In 1965, America's top 1% controlled about 10% of the nation's after-tax income. That number has now grown to over 15%. The average CEO-to-worker pay ratio had increased from 20-1 in 1965 to a whopping 312-1 in 2017. And middle-class real wage growth has been stagnant for decades."
Presidential candidates have also weighed in on the fast-growing income inequality in the US. Senator Bernie Sanders talked about "Tax on Extreme Wealth" with a proposal for an ultra-wealthy tax ranging between 2% and 8%. Andrew Yang, another presidential candidate, ran on implementing a universal basic income of $1,000/month for every American adult over the age of 18.
Given this widening income gap between rich and poor and stagnant wages for the middle class, we need some serious socio-economic re-engineering. Here are some:
1. Implement Laureate Yunus' Microcredit Model to Create Economic Opportunities in Inner Cities –- Most inner cities in the US lack good economic opportunities resulting in poverty, often rampant poverty. Thousands of bright people are stuck in poverty in inner cities due to state and local governments' inability to create meaningful economic opportunities. One-size-fits-all economic model does not work there; instead, local governments should try Laureate Yunus' Microcredit Economic Model, thus financially empowering the local entrepreneurs (who "are too poor to qualify for traditional bank loans") to turn their neighborhoods around. Though this bottom-up economic model was developed for impoverished villages in third world countries, it has tremendous potential for our inner cities.
2. Let the Private Sector Develop a Fair and Equitable Property Tax Assessment System –- Property tax is often the primary source of revenue for Cities and Towns. The poorly built or haphazard assessment systems tend to be highly regressive, thus heavily favoring the rich. Under such a biased system, the poor and middle-class homeowners subsidize the upscale and high-end properties. Therefore, the growing and prospering cities and towns around the country must consider outsourcing this crucial public task to the private sector or developing it in collaboration with the private sector, so it becomes truly fair and equitable. Ideally, the development and managing of this task must be entrusted to the private sector. An unfair system uproots seniors and minorities and often pushes the middle class off the cliff.
3. Build more Long-term Care Facilities, not Jails and Prisons –-People committing the so-called "serious crimes" must be sent to high-security long-term care centers under the care of qualified psychologists and psychiatrists. The young and reinvented cities around the country should rethink and redefine crime and punishment from a moral high ground. The lack (perhaps the absence of) of economic opportunities often forces poor people to commit petty offenses, resulting in additional jail terms. Instead of sending them to jails, they should be assigned to the local clergies, rabbis, and imams to perform community service. Similarly, in a civilized world, juvenile detention centers' building does not pass the muster of moral hazards.
4. Make College Education Free for STEM Students – This country needs to emphasize science and technology education to maintain global championship. Government colleges must provide free STEM education to all qualified poor students. Students must compete and qualify for the available seats to get into the free STEM programs, ensuring the best and brightest acceptance. Students pursuing other essential disciplines like nursing, teaching, etc. must receive tuition subsidies as well. All other majors (e.g., business, humanities, etc.), irrespective of the students' financial needs, must pay full tuition, thereby forcing the otherwise needy to pursue vocational education in line with the market demand.
5. Richest 1% Needs to Accept the Generational Reset – The wealthiest 1% now owns 50.1% of the world's wealth. Given this absurd concentration of wealth, we need this 1% to be self-convinced (like Mr. Warren Buffett) that they are just temporary custodians of their wealth. They must, therefore, come to terms with the generational reset, meaning, at the end of their lives, they must return a sizable portion, if not all, of their wealth to society, pulling tens of thousands out of abject poverty each year. In other words, the success or failure of this country is now mostly dependent on them. If they are honest and honorable enough to accept this harsh reality, the citizenry's advancement will gleefully continue; absent this, millions more will continue to drift away in utter poverty.
Of course, the 99% must also learn to put the country's interest ahead of their own. So, the rich and poor alike must come to terms with the generational reset, voluntarily returning a big part, if not all, of overall wealth to society.