By Moritz Koch
SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG/Worldcrunch
SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG/Worldcrunch
(excerpts)
They don’t have any leaders or specific goals – only the feeling of
belonging to the same majority. "We are the 99%," read the placards (and
Internet blog) of predominantly young Americans who for two weeks,
under the slogan "Occupy Wall Street," have been out on the streets of
New York City. Their protest may not be well organized. Nor is it
exactly clear what they hope to acheive. But it would be wrong to write
them off. They are calling our attention to the split between rich and
poor in the United States, and for that alone they deserve respect.
Here are some of the things "We are the 99%" protesters denounce: no
longer being able to pay their mortgages; the fear of losing their jobs;
student debts. These are problems the other 1% doesn’t have to deal
with. The super-rich control 90% of the country’s wealth. The disparity
between them and the rest of the population is comparable to the days of
the railroad tycoons in the 19th century.
Such imbalance is gradually becoming a very heavy load for the
American democracy to bear. Wall Street is the feeding ground for the
upper class. It’s the place where even mediocre bankers get
million-dollar bonuses, where failed CEOs get golden handshakes, where
some hedge fund managers can earn more than a corporation – and where
the tax payer pays the bill when speculative transactions go down the
tubes.
Well before the financial crisis, Citigroup analysts Ajay Kapur,
Niall Macleod and Narendra Singh described the U.S. economy as a
“plutonomy”: the profits of economic growth were consumed by society’s
top dogs, so much so that there wasn’t much left over for the rest of
the population.
These opposite poles have only become more sharply antagonized during
the crisis. Despite recent turbulence, capital markets have recovered –
but the situation of most Americans is a lot worse. Real estate prices
are all over the place, and jobless quotas are stuck at recession level.
The middle classes are losing ground, ever faster and ever more
severely.
This process of erosion began back in the 1980s, when factories in
the Midwest started closing their doors. But never has the American
Dream, that of sweating one’s way to success, rung so hollow as right
now. The only people who stand a chance of advancement are graduates of
the top universities, where only the super-bright are admitted in the
first place -- or people who are already rich. Thus is the cement that
held the United States together disintegrating...
No comments:
Post a Comment