https://www.oftwominds.com/blogdec20/phantom-middle-class12-20.html
Our Phantom Middle Class
Of the many things we cannot bring ourselves to admit, one of the most consequential is that
our vaunted middle class is illusory, a phantom of our imagination rather than a reality.
The reality is the vast majority of the nation's wealth and income has been diverted from the
middle class to those at the pinnacle of the wealth-power pyramid and the technocrat / financier
insider class (the top 10%) that serves the interests of those at the pinnacle.
This transfer has accelerated rapidly in the 21st century as virtually all the real income gains of the
past 20 years have flowed to the top 0.1%. This RAND study found that America's elites siphoned
$50 trillion into their own pockets in the past two generations:
Trends in Income From 1975 to 2018. (Please look at the "Fruits of Financialization" chart below.)
The earnings of the top 0.1% grew 15 times faster than the earnings of the bottom 90% (See chart
below) as wages' share of the economy continues its 50-year decline.
As for wealth: the top 0.1% own more than the bottom 80% (see chart below) and the top 1%
own 40% of all private wealth and the top 10% own 90%.
If the top 10% own 90% of the wealth and has captured virtually all the income gains of the
past 20 years, then isn't it obvious America has no middle class? What the traditional
middle class--generally defined as the 50% between the bottom 40% and the top 10%--own is debt
and a feeble grasp on very thin reeds of capital.
Please ponder the chart below of the $1.7 trillion in student loan debt burdening those
who bought the narrative that a college diploma was a passport to the security of the middle class.
The debt load carried by those clinging on to aspirations of middle class security is staggering.
As I've noted here before, burdening powerless students with uncertain futures with trillions in
high-interest debt would have been viewed as criminal two generations ago, but now it's celebrated
by those reaping the interest from precariat debt-serfs.
Broadly speaking, the key assets of the middle class are capital and agency,
with capital being defined as financial, intellectual and social capital that generates
income, earned and unearned, and agency defined as control over one's life and options and
having a say in public decision-making.
Understood in this way, the 50% between the bottom 40% and the top 10% own precious little
income-producing capital and possess very little agency. The political class serves the top
0.1% and only gives lip-service to the PR-worthy convention of a middle class in the form of platitudes.
In terms of control
over one's options, those claiming middle class status cling to jobs because they
need the healthcare insurance coverage provided by the employer, not because the job is rewarding.
As for possessing skills, much of the workforce has few producer skills, as
the consumer economy devotes inordinate attention not to producing but to marketing,
speculation and complying with counterproductive regulations and bureaucratic file-shuffling.
Once the con of printing trilions of dollars out of thin air dissolves and the nation has to
balance its books in the real world, these file-shuffling and speculative skills will no longer
generate meaningful income.
The last vestiges of financial security for the middle 50% are pensions and ownership of a home,
which is less a real asset and more a call-option on the current housing bubble. This
phantom "wealth" is one encounter with reality away from disappearing into the mists of speculative
extremes imploding.
As for pensions, these promises on future energy and income gains are only geared for an economy of
ever-expanding energy, productivity and production of surplus goods and services. As America has
substituted speculation for these real-world gains, pensions are also one encounter with reality
away from disappearing into the mists.
The American Dream was based on broad-based access to acquiring capital and agency, access which
has narrowed to the top slice of the economic order. Even the top 10% is misleading, as
the vast majority of capital and agency are held by the top 1% and to a lesser degree, the top 5%.
The actual capital and agency of those below the 5% mark falls off rapidly, effectively reaching
near-zero about the 15% mark.
As the chart "wages aren't keeping up" shows, the purchasing power of "middle class" wages has
plummeted, meaning less income is available after paying all the big-ticket essential expenses.
The Federal Reserve has played a game of lowering interest rates so households can lower their
interest expenses by refinancing their mortgages, but this game has ended; interest rates cannot
drop any further without entering negative rates, a zone of insolvency for the banking sector.
In other words, the game of creating the illusion of real wage gains is over.
What happens when America finally admits its middle class is a phantom of feel-good fantasy?
We may well find out in the next four years.
....
And regarding this from the previous article " these promises on future energy and income gains are only geared for an economy of ever-expanding energy " the fracking miracle/mirage/illusion is imploding:
https://srsroccoreport.com/the-collapse-of-u-s-shale-oil-production-has-now-begun/
The Collapse Of U.S. Shale Oil Production Has Now Begun
It’s Official. The collapse of U.S. shale oil production has begun. The mighty Shale Oil BOOM has now finally turned into a BUST. While the pandemic shutdowns sped up the process, the collapse of the U.S. shale industry was going to occur, regardless. According to the U.S. Energy Information Agency, shale oil production will continue to decline below 7.5 million barrels per day in January.
At the peak last year, the top five shale oil fields combined production reached nearly 9.2 million barrels per day. Since the shutdowns during March-April, many of the companies curtailed shale oil production. However, all of these wells have now been brought online, but the massive decline rate is kicking in due to a lack of drilling and completion activity.
As we can see in the chart below, shale oil production in these five fields fell from 9.16 million barrels per day during the peak in 2019 to 7.27 million barrels per day forecasted next month (January).
In a little more than a year, the combined shale production from these five fields declined by 1.9 million barrels. The data in the chart above is shown in thousand barrels per day. According to Shaleprofile.com, these five fields add more than 11,000 new wells in 2019. In looking at the new well trend data for Jan-Oct 2020, I would be surprised to see more than a total of about 5,000 wells added this year.
While the Permian suffered the highest decline in shale oil production, the biggest loser in percentage terms was the Anadarko Field. Oil production from the Anadarko declined from 603,000 barrels per day (b/d) at the peak last year to a forecasted 363,000 bd in January. That’s a stunning 40% decline in a little more than a year.
The Niobrara in Colorado reported the next largest decline at 34%, followed by the Eagle Ford (-30%), Bakken (-22%), and Permian (-18%). The average percentage of production decline from the fields since the peak last year was 21%.
Oil Geologist Art Berman produced this chart showing where he forecasts U.S. oil production by September 2021.
Art believes total U.S. oil production will decline to 7.7 million barrels per day by September 2021. However, I don’t believe this forecast will happen because his chart shows total U.S. oil production will be approximately 10.2 million barrels per day by January 2021. The EIA reports that U.S. oil production is 11.0 million barrels per day on Dec 11th.
It’s probably more realistic to forecast a decline to 9.5-10 million barrels per day by September 2021. We will see. Regardless, the mightily U.S. shale oil Boom has now turned into a Bust. While it will take 5-10 years to collapse by 75%, it’s not ever coming back.
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