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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
8 May 2013
Corporate Cowards Divert Shareholder Funds into “Dark Money”

If corporations are people, as the Supreme Court pretends, they certainly are loudmouths, constantly telling … Read More.

1 May 2013
George W's $250 Million Can of Whitewash

Big doings in Big D — the George W. Bush Presidential Library is open for business! What a piece of … Read More.

24 Apr 2013
Gagging on Ag-gag Laws

In most state legislatures today, "off the wall" has become the political center, and bizarre bills … Read More.

“The Dow” Versus “The Doug”

Comment

"It's a sign," exclaims a February Associated Press story — a sign that our economy is "healing." "It signals that things are getting back to normal," added a delighted market analyst. And a March 4 New York Times report heralded it as "a golden age."

The "it" they're hailing is the Dow, that mystical force believed by faithful Dowists to be "The Way" — the provider of good fortune, often bestowing its magical beneficence by magical means. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is the holy measure of corporate stock prices, and it is now smiling warmly on its acolytes.

Last week, the Dow Jones Average reached a new high, having regained every dime of the $11 trillion that Wall Street investors had lost in the 2007 crash. "Hallelujah," shout the devout. "All praise the Dow!"

Unless, of course, your wealth is dependent not on stock prices, but on wages. In that case, you're among the majority of Americans who're more concerned about the Doug Jones Average. Forget the buzz about "a golden age" — Doug, Darcy, Diego, Deewanna and all the other Joneses can't even afford to enter the Golden Arches, for they're still mired in the Great Job Depression that Wall Street's crash caused.

Washington rushed to the rescue of the financial elites, but the Joneses are still getting double-stiffed by Washington policymakers and by the very elites Washington continues to coddle. The GOP House refuses to talk about a minimal tax hike on the superrich, but members had no qualms about jacking up the payroll taxes on millions of workaday people.

Meanwhile, even as corporate profits have rocketed up by 20 percent a year since the end of 2008, the chieftains are still refusing to increase hiring and are holding down wages. As a result, the share of America's total income that goes to workers has now tumbled to the lowest level in nearly half a century.

United Technologies (one of the 30 corporations whose financial performances are measured to calculate the Dow Jones Averages) is a force in that knockdown. This industrial giant, fed a regular diet of fat government contracts, has enjoyed annual revenue increases of some $2 billion a year since 2005, yet rather than increasing its workforce, CEO Louis Chenevert is shedding workers.

Last month, only four days after announcing that United Tech's stock price had leaped to a record high, the corporation revealed that it will fire 3,000 employees this year, on top of the 4,000 dumped in 2012.

That is the harsh math behind such recent smiley-face headlines as this one: "Household wealth back at pre-recession levels." Oh, joy — we're all rich again!

Or not. The article attributes the gain in household wealth to "surging stock prices." But before you start ripping up your floorboards in hopes of finding your share of this bounty, read deeper into the article to learn that the Dow doesn't do much at all for the Doug. In fact, the wealthiest 10 percent of households own 80 percent of all corporate stocks.

Harsher yet is the way the corporate powers are treating those financially stretched Americans who're looking not for a bundle of wealth, but just a decent job. Today's massive backlog of unemployed and underemployed workers allows corporations to bring in hoards of top-quality applicants and literally toy with them. It's now common for a job-seeker to return five, seven, nine or more times to the same company hiring hall for senseless rounds of interviews — only to have the company whimsically decide not to fill the opening at all.

From Google to Starbucks, major corporations have roughly doubled the duration of their interview process in the last two years. The New York Times noted that one fellow seeking a video-editing job was run through a gauntlet of nine interviews and made to undergo a ridiculous battery of psychological and personality exams, along with a math quiz and a spelling test — after which the company simply closed the opening.

Insulting, yes, but expensive, too. The out-of-work interviewee has to pay for producing work samples and cover the cost of everything from dry cleaning to parking fees. The job-dangling corporation, on the other hand, can simply force existing employees to shoulder a heavier load, while it trifles with applicants looking for what is laughingly referred to in CorporateSpeak as "the purple squirrel" — an applicant too qualified to exist.

Even a dog knows the difference between being tripped over ... and kicked. The way workaday Americans are being kicked around today is revolting — both in the sense of being abhorrent and inevitably inducing a revolt.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
Part of, not all, of my 401K is invested in the stock market. The same is true for many millions of people in this country. There is no guarantee that any investment in the stock market will produce a profit. It is a risk-reward investment vehicle. Record stock market prices are welcomed as my retirement fund benefits. I love wealthy people and I hope their investments in the stock market rise beyond their wildest imagination. When they make money, I make money. What a beautiful thing capitalism is. Too bad there are so many socialist ideologues ranting against them and creating mass wealth-envy but that's the price will live with in a Constitutional Republic that guarantees freedom of speech to any envious person that wants publish hate and discontent.
Comment: #1
Posted by: David Henricks
Tue Mar 12, 2013 11:11 PM
Jim is spouting the same old unproven "eat the rich mantra". But David is right, we are all connected and as the rich get richer, so do the rest of us. And its Obama, not the GOP that insisted on the payroll increase. And its the Obama teams thats playing ball with the special interests. Point the finger at the dems Jim, its your own party that betrays your ideals.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Thu Mar 14, 2013 9:18 AM
Chris and David --

Sadly, your trickle-down theory is not supported by 'facts'. The past decade has seen a dramatic shrinking of the middle class, while the bulk of the wealth of the country is being hoarded in ever-increasing numbers by a few at the top.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Gretchen Zimmermann
Thu Mar 14, 2013 1:26 PM
Re: Gretchen Zimmermann The facts are when the stock market goes up mu 401K increases. It's not complicated.
Comment: #4
Posted by: David Henricks
Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:34 PM
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