Showing posts with label wages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wages. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Two Income Households, 'Mean' and 'Median' Income Statistics

(* Editor's note: A related post is here -- Only 20% are Middle-Class, Most Don't Come Close)

"Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am, stuck in the middle with you."

Editor's Note: This is "part 2" to a previous article

Page Menu: Union versus Non-Union Wages | Low Wages Rule the Day | Poverty | The Top 1% | Households, in General | Two Income Households

Short Explanation of Mean and Median Numerals

There's a huge difference between the much reported "average household income" and what most people actually earn. The "median" is the "middle number" (in a sorted list of numbers). To find the median, place the numbers you are given in value order and find the middle number.

Example: find the median of 12, 3 and 5. Put them in order: 3, 5, 12. The middle number is 5, so the median is 5. If there are an even amount of numbers such as 3, 5, 8, 12 , find the value half-way between them, add them together and divide them by 2: (5 + 8 = 13 ÷ 2 = 6.5). And so, the "median" in this example is 6.5.

Mean Value - The "mean" is just the average of the numbers. Add up all the numbers, then divide by how many numbers there are. It really doesn't tell you very much regarding what most people actually earn without gathering all the data and computing the numbers. And someone has.


The total U.S. labor force is 153,392,000 with a participation rate of 64.2% because 139,764,000 are actually working, 18,425,000 were part-time, and 6,130,000 were unemployed over 6 months. 77.3 million Americans earn poverty wages and 8 million unemployed are no longer counted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (they claim a much lower number).

The Bureau Labor Statistics reports "median" weekly earnings of the nation's 100.8 million full-time wage and salary workers were $769 in the first quarter of 2012 ($39,988 a year or $19.22 a hour). Women who usually worked full time had median weekly earnings of $697, or 82.2 percent of the $848 median for men.

Yahoo reports that based on date from Social Security, "while the average U.S. income last year was $39,959, the mean income — the figure where half earn more and half earn less — was much lower, $26,364. This disparity reflects the fact that "the distribution of workers by wage level is highly skewed."

50 percent of all wage earners had net compensation less than or equal to the median wage, which is estimated to be $26,363.55 a year for 2010. The U.S. Census Bureau defines "median income" as the amount which divides everybody's personal income into two equal groups, half having income above that amount, and half having income below that amount. More here from the Huffington Post.

Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist for Barclays Capital, says government reports from the U.S. Census, the Social Security Administration, and the Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistic often reflect "aggregate" or "average" incomes, which may be skewed by wealthier Americans. "The Sentier Research study is more indicative of a typical household", says Dean Maki.

Remember, a "median wage" or "mean" wage is not what most people actually earn, especially before taxes.

(* Editor's Note: I've often heard the media reports saying "the average American median wage in the U.S. is $50,000", or some such number they're always throwing around, and I always thought I earned much less than most other people...when in fact, we've all been getting under-paid for the last 30 years.)

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Union versus Non-Union Wages

The Bureau Labor Statistics reports in 2011 that the union membership rate--the percent of wage and salary workers who were members of a union--was 11.8 percent. The number of wage and salary workers belonging to unions was14.8 million. In 1983 the union membership rate was 20.1 percent and there were 17.7 million union workers.

Public-sector workers had a union membership rate (37.0 percent) more than five times higher than that of private-sector workers (6.9 percent). In 2011, 7.6 million employees in the public sector belonged to a union, compared with 7.2 million union workers in the private sector.

In 2011, 16.3 million wage and salary workers were represented by a union. This group includes both union members (14.8 million) and workers who report no union affiliation but whose jobs are covered by a union contract (1.5 million).

In 2011, among full-time wage and salary workers, union members had median usual weekly earnings of $938 ($48,776 a year before taxes) while those who were not union members had median weekly earnings of $729 ($37,908 a year.)

Today day in 2012 the average mean wage for a steelworker is $24.11 an hour, or $50,160 a year -- about what a typical teacher, fireman, or police person might earn. That's because they are represented by unions, and their wages have kept pace with the rising cost of living over the past sixty years. They're not over-paid as the Republicans like say, they're just earning an average and comfortable middle-class living....like most of us did back in the 1950s.

I calculated that a middle-class wage today would be about $21.63 an hour BEFORE payroll taxes, not including emergency savings for repairs, clothes, entertainment, or a savings account for retirement and college. More here...

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Low Wages Rule the Day

The Bureau Labor Statistics reports in 2011, 73.9 million American workers age 16 and over were paid at hourly rates, representing 59.1 percent of all wage and salary workers. Among those paid by the hour, 1.7 million earned exactly the prevailing Federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. About 2.2 million had wages below the minimum. Together, these 3.8 million workers with wages at or below the Federal minimum made up 5.2 percent of all hourly-paid workers.

In the gray area of the chart below, the male and female median individual incomes are added together and then divided by 2 for a median income of $26,598 a year. That was in 2003; seven years later it's gone down to $26,363 a year -- or based on a 40-hour week, a median hourly wage of $12.67 in this income group.

Most new jobs are in the service industry and pay less that $10 an hour. (See a list of jobs with wages near the bottom) The most dominate occupations in the U.S. today: (Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics)

  • Office and Administrative Occupations 21.4 million
  • Sales and Related Occupations 13.6 million
  • Food Preparation and Serving Related Occupations 11.2 million
  • Transportation and Material Moving Occupations 8.6 million
  • Education, Training, and Library Occupations 8.4 million
  • Production Occupations 8.4 million. Manufacturing was once our most dominate occupation. Last year Representative Betty Sutton, in a speech to the House of Representatives, noted that just between 2001 and 2010 alone, America has lost over 56,000 factories. Politifact rated her claim "true".

The "median" hourly wage in this group is $16.57 and the "mean" annual wage is $45,230. The national average wage index for 2010 was $41,673.83

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The Top 1%

Meanwhile, CEO pay has skyrocketed in that same period of time, averaging near $13 million a year in 2011. A 2006 analysis of IRS income data by economists Emmanuel Saez at the University of California, Berkeley and Thomas Piketty at the Paris School of Economics showed that the share of income held by the top 1% was had already been as large in 2005 as it was in 1928.

EPI researchers found that the wealthiest 1 percent of U.S. households had net worth that was 225 times greater than the typical median household's net worth. That disparity, according to EPI, is the highest ratio on record.

1.4 million make up the very top quintile of taxpayers.

Based on 2009 tax year filing data, the Internal Revenue Service says an adjusted gross income, or AGI, of $343,927 or more will put you in the top 1 percent of taxpayers. A married couple with two kids and combined earnings of $343,927 or more also was among the top earners in the country.

The 1.4 million Americans in the IRS' top taxpayer category reported nearly 17 percent of all the country's taxable income. From those filers, the IRS collected $318 billion or almost 37 percent of all the individual taxes paid.

The Tax Policy Center in Washington, D.C., a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution, ran an economic simulation model that showed the top 1 percent of earners in 2009 made $503,086. TPC projects $516,633 as the cutoff for the top earners in 2010 and $532,613 for 2011.

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Poverty

The nation's official poverty rate in 2010 was 15.1 percent, up from 14.3 percent in 2009 ─ the third consecutive annual increase in the poverty rate. There were 46.2 million people in poverty in 2010, up from 43.6 million in 2009 ─ the fourth consecutive annual increase and the largest number in the 52 years for which poverty estimates have been published.

The number of people without health insurance coverage rose from 49.0 million in 2009 to 49.9 million in 2010, while the percentage without coverage −16.3 percent - was not statistically different from the rate in 2009.

  • 55.8 million receive some form of Social Security benefits (retirement averaged $14,760 a year and those on SS disability averaged $13,332 a year).
  • Of the 12.7 million who are unemployed, only 6.7 million currently receive unemployment benefits ($15,340 a year).
  • 8 million exhausted all their unemployed benefits without ever finding work again. ZERO income.

Squeezed by rising living costs, a record number of Americans — nearly 1 in 2 — have fallen into poverty or are scraping by on earnings that classify them as low income.

Sheldon Danziger, a University of Michigan public policy professor who specializes in poverty, says "If Congress and the states make further cuts, we can expect the number of poor and low-income families to rise for the next several years."

Among those requesting emergency food assistance, 51 percent were in families, 26 percent were employed, 19 percent were elderly and 11 percent were homeless.

And we already know what to expect from the Republicans and their right-wing advocacy groups such as the Heritage Foundation (called "think tanks", but are more like lobbyists). They are all denying these statistics so as not to have taxes raised on millionaires and billionaires, which are now historically low. Tax Rates on from1862 to 2012.

Many formerly middle-class Americans are dropping below the low-income threshold — roughly $45,000 for a family of four — because of pay cuts, a forced reduction of work hours or a spouse or both losing their job.

About 97.3 million Americans fall into a low-income category and 49.1 million who already fallen below the poverty line and are counted as poor, number 146.4 million, or 48 percent of the U.S. population (10.2 million had been added just since the recession that began in late 2007).

Paychecks for low-income families are shrinking. The inflation-adjusted average earnings for the bottom 20 percent of families have fallen to just under $15,000 a year, and earnings for the next 20 percent have remained flat. In contrast, higher-income brackets had significant wage growth since 1979, with earnings for the top 5 percent of families climbing 64 percent to more than $313,000.

Fifty percent of U.S. workers earned less than $26,364 last year. Despite population growth, the number of Americans with jobs fell again last year, with total employment of just under 150.4 million — down from 150.9 million in 2009 and 155.4 million in 2008. In all, there were 5.2 million fewer jobs than in 2007, when the deep recession began, according to the IRS data.

Median compensation last year was just 66 percent of the average income, compared with nearly 72 percent in 1980.

Per capita income is total personal income divided by the total population. Median household income is the income of the "middle" household. When the household income distribution is arranged in order from lowest to highest, half of all incomes are below and half are above the median.

U.S. Census data show that from 2000 to 2010, median income in the U.S. declined 7 percent. And the outlook for recouping lost earnings isn't good, according to a recent Wall Street Journal survey of economists. The economists told the newspaper they expect inflation-adjusted incomes to rise only 5 percent over the next decade.

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Households, in General

The Bureau Labor Statistics reports (PDF) 141,006,000 million "employed" households. As of 2009 from the U.S. Census (PDF): There were 60,844,000 married couples, of which 33,249,000 both worked.

Real "median household income" is also still 7% lower than it was in December 2007 and 3.9% lower than in June 2009, when the recession officially ended, says a study by Sentier Research. On top of that, we had 2.5% inflation this year and 3.3% in 2011, as wages remain low while the cost of living keeps rising.

According to the last U.S. Census, there were 114,235,996 households, and according the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of families with at least one member unemployed was 9.0 million in 2011.

Americans' incomes continued to fall in the recovery, Sentier data show, as more workers found fewer jobs and many of the unemployed took lower-level positions to get by on. There are currently 7.7 million who are only working part time but wanted full-time work.

Reuters reported on October 2011) that "median annual incomes" (adjusted for inflation) dropped 6.7 percent between June 2009 and June 2011, more than double the 3.2 percent drop experienced during the recession. This knocked real MEDIAN ANNUAL HOUSEHOLD INCOME down to $49,909 in June 2011 from $55,309 in December 2007, when the recession began. "Essentially, American households continued to lose ground." By spring 2011, the number of doubled-up households had increased by 2.0 million to 21.8 million.

The U.S. Census reports a similar number before it dropped, that "median household income" in the United States in 2010 was $49,445 (that would be an individual mean income of $24,722 per person in two income households, a 2.3 percent decline from the 2009 median income.)

U.S. Census: Income, Expenditures, Poverty, & Wealth: Household Income (Excel 98k and PDF 60k)

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Two Income Households

With the emergence of a two-tier labor market, the economic benefits and life chances have considerably shrank for the lower middle class, that had needed two income earners in order to sustain a comfortable middle-class standard of living.

The national MEDIAN wage (the middle, not average, for all earners) for individuals is approximately $32,000 and $46,000 for households. In terms of personal income distribution, the growing lower middle class could have gross annual personal incomes ranging from about $32,500 to $52,800 a year. But the working class majority earns $14.40 an hour or less (about $32,000 or less annually) and would need to earn at least $28.00 a hour to sustain a family of four they way someone could 60 years ago without a second income. 53% of all Americans are now members of the working or lower classes.

Such households could boast annual incomes ranging from $35,200 to $52,800, and thus be located in the MIDDLE of the income range, are sometimes referred to as being middle class, but in reality, cannot afford a real middle class lifestyle with the rising cost of living.

The definition of "Dual Income, No Kids" or DINKS, is a household in which there are two incomes and no children (either both partners are working or one has two incomes). DINKS are often the target of marketing efforts for luxury items such as expensive cars and vacations. Or DINKY, an acronym meaning "Dual (or Double) Income, No Kids Yet/Yuppie".

But these days most people need a two income household...from various sources:

  • The Department of Labor says, "Between 1996 and 2006, the number of dual-income families increased by 31%, from 25.5 to 33.4 million families.
  • According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data from 2010, in families with children, 58% of households had two working parents.
  • Here it says, "In 2007 the U.S. Labor Department reported that 57 percent of all married couples, both husbands and wives worked."
  • And of all households: Dual-income families accounted for 43.6 percent, single-income homes for 42.3 percent, and elderly couples who do not work made up 14.1 percent.
  • Wiki says, "In 2005 the U.S. Census Bureau reported that 42% of all households had two income earners.
  • Bureau of Labor Statistics: "Dual-earner couples are swiftly replacing the traditional married-couple model of a "breadwinner" husband and "homemaker" wife. From 1970 to 1993, the proportion of dual-earner couples increased from 39 percent to 61 percent of all married couples."

While households with just one income earner, most commonly the male, were the norm in the middle of the 20th century, 42% of all households and the vast majority of married couple households now have two or more income earners. With so many present day households having two income earners, a substantial increase in HOUSEHOLD INCOME is easy to explain.

Elizabeth Warren, Harvard Magazine: "The typical middle-class household in the United States is no longer a one-earner family, with one parent in the workforce and one at home full-time. Instead, the majority of families with small children now have both parents rising at dawn to commute to jobs so they can both pull in paychecks... The only real increase in wages for a family has come from the second paycheck earned by a working mother."

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Unemployment

"A recession is when a neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose yours." - Ronald Reagan

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Wages: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

Tell Ann Romney that a middle-class wage in 2012 is $45,000 a year after taxes, but 50% of all U.S. workers earn less than half that before taxes.

In the Old Days

Since first being established at 25 cents an hour by FDR in 1938 under the Fair Labor Standards Act, the federal minimum wage has been raised only 22 times since then. Today the Republicans want to abolish it.

Over sixty years ago, during and after World War II, one could leave their rural community and obtain a government job (civilian or in armed service) and earn a decent living. Since then, "government" was, and always has been, America's single biggest "job creator". (Yes Speaker Boehner, government does create jobs.)

Or they could have left the family farm and moved to the big city and found work paying good wage in a mill or factory, without even having a high school diploma.

In 1952 the president of Jones and Laughlin Steel Company complained that the cost of the union's wage and benefit package was $1.08 an hour (or $2,246 a year). The average median salary at that time was $2,992 a year during the 1950s, when the U.S. population was half of what it is today. By that time the minimum wage had risen to $0.75 an hour.

J & L Steel (known to its employees as simply "J & L") provided the most competition to the Carnegie Steel Company in the Pittsburgh vicinity. Back in those days a man could go to work at the local steel mill and provide a decent living for his family of four while his wife stayed home to raise their children. (Yes Mrs. Romney, the wife could afford a "choice" to be a stay-at-home mom.)

What it Costs to Live a Middle-Class Life Now

Today in 2012 the average mean wage for a steelworker is $24.11 an hour, or $50,160 a year -- about what a typical teacher, fireman, or police person might earn. That's because they are represented by unions, and their wages have kept pace with the rising cost of living over the past sixty years. They also maintained their family healthcare plans that were provided by their employers. They're not over-paid as the Republicans like say, they're just earning an average and comfortable middle-class living....like most of us did back in the 1950s.

In 2012, it costs at least $45,000 a year (after payroll taxes) to meet the minimum cost for a typical American middle-class family of four, living in an average home, in an average neighborhood, and driving average cars.

A typical monthly budget might look like this:


That would equal $45,000 a year, which would be needed AFTER payroll taxes are deducted. That does not include emergency savings for repairs, clothes, entertainment, or a savings account for retirement and college. If the spouse also works, babysitters or daycare expenses would be deducted from those additional earnings.

$45,000 a year equals $21.63 an hour BEFORE payroll taxes are deducted. Remember, steelworkers now earn an average of $24.11 an hour (a middle-class wage).

* High-cost metropolitan areas such as NYC, Boston and San Francisco would be much higher. You can transpose $150 of the monthly budget from electricity to natural gas or oil if you use that for heat.)

Prevailing Wages For Average American Workers

Half the entire U.S. workforce now earns less than $12.67 a hour. The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is about 1/3 of a middle-class wage of $21.63 an hour. Last year the average CEO earned $10.8 million and paid a lower tax rate (15%) than those middle-class steelworkers, firefighters and teachers (25%). (See tax brackets and rates here)

As of the last quarter of 2011, the total median household income was $52,378 a year (that's just $26,188 per person in a two income household.)

Last year 50% of all U.S. workers earned less than $26,364 a year (that's $12.67 an hour) when the poverty level for a family household of four is considered to be $22,314 a year (which is a very low government assessment). $22,314 year is about what Ann Romney spends every year just to feed and care for her favorite horse.

By contrast, for those out of work, the average American collected only $295 in weekly unemployment benefits ($15,340 a year) which only replaced about a third of the average worker's previous salary.

If one were working a full-time 40-hour per week job (providing they could find one) and earned the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, they would only be earning $290 a week, or $1,257 a month, or $15,080 a year.

As for retired workers, their average monthly Social Security benefit was about $1,230 a month at the beginning of 2012 ($14,760 a year).

Disabled workers on Social Security disability averaged $1,111 a month ($13,332 a year).

At least 8 million unemployment Americas exhausted all their unemployed benefits without ever finding work again. Some retired early, some became disabled (many denied SSD benefits), and others moved in with family or friends. Millions now earn $0 and hour, or $0 a week, or $0 a year --- and now just subsist on food stamps.

Are these the people that the Republicans are complaining about, who aren't paying their fair share of federal income taxes, and that they should "put more skin in the game"?

The poverty level $22,314 a year is only HALF the income needed in 2012 that would be necessary for a family of four to live on for a middle-class life-style without a spouse who is also working (if they had made a "choice" to be a stay-at-home mom.). The poverty level of $22,314 a year would include EVERYBODY who are dependent on unemployment benefits, Social Security funds, and disability payments.

How can a spouse (a mom or dad) earn $22,314 or less a year and expect a parent to "choose" to stay at home to raise their children? They can't, and the don't. Both parents must work to live a middle-class life-style. A divorce could be financially catastrophic for both parents, and one or both could end up on welfare and food stamps, just to survive.

The Role of Labor Unions

Union membership exploded during and after World War II, nearly doubling between 1938 and 1946. It was after World War II that American Exceptionalism became most valid, when the United States emerged as the advanced, capitalist democracy. At 35%, the unionization rate in 1945 was the highest in American history.

A concerted drive by the CIO to organize the South called "Operation Dixie" failed dismally in 1946. Unable to overcome private repression, racial divisions, and the pro-employer stance of southern local and state [Republican] governments, the CIO's defeat left the South as a non-union, low-wage domestic enclave and a bastion of anti- union politics (which still is today).

Then, in 1946, a conservative Republican majority was elected to Congress, dashing all hopes for any renewed post-war New Deals.

The quarter century after 1950 formed a ‘golden age' for American unions. Established unions found a secure place at the bargaining table with America's leading firms in such industries as autos, steel, trucking, and chemicals. Contracts were periodically negotiated providing for the exchange of good wages for cooperative workplace relations. Rules were negotiated providing a system of civil authority at work, with negotiated regulations for promotion and layoffs, and procedures giving workers opportunities to voice grievances before neutral arbitrators.

Wages rose steadily, by over 2 percent per year and union workers earned a comfortable 20 percent more than non-union workers of similar age, experience and education. American wages were higher and growth was rapid enough to narrow the gap between rich and poor, and between management salaries and worker wages.

Unions also won a growing list of benefit programs, medical and dental insurance, paid holidays and vacations, supplemental unemployment insurance, and pensions. Competition for workers forced many non-union employers to match the benefit packages won by unions, but unionized employers provided benefits worth over 60 percent more than were given non-union workers.

* Because of outsourcing, we now have a glut of labor, high unemployment, and lower wages.

In no other country have women and members of racial minorities assumed such prominent positions in the labor movement as they have in the United States. The movement of African-American and women to leadership positions in the late-twentieth century labor movement was accelerated by a shift in the membership structure of the United States union movement.

The union participation rate has declined in all industries since the "golden age" for American workers: from 35% in 1945, to 30% in 1970, to 24.7% in 1980, to 17.6% in 1990, to 11.8% today. That is the Republican legacy for average American workers, and why the economy is where is today. (Source)

The Auto Industry at a Glance

Besides the steel industry and government jobs, the U.S. auto industry used to be one of the best places to work in the 1950s.

GM’s president “Engine Charlie” E. Wilson told Congress in 1953, “What’s good for America is good for General Motors, and vice versa.” He took home $586,100 a year when the minimum wage was $0.75 an hour and gasoline was $0.27 a gallon.

During this time 80 percent of the world’s auto production and assembly was centered in Detroit. Back then GM was the world's largest corporation and had 46 percent of the American auto market. At its peak, the company employed more than 600,000 Americans.

But little by little over the past few decades, instead of exporting their products, the auto manufacturers (like all other major American manufacturers) began exporting their factories and our jobs instead. Now American companies employee people all over the world. Just under George W. Bush alone we've lost 52,000 factories.

Through NAFTA, we have guaranteed an endless hemorrhaging of our manufacturing base out of the United States. GM is now the largest employer...in Mexico. Since 1978, General Motors has built more than 50 parts factories in Mexico, which today employ 72,000 workers and pays thousands of Mexican workers between $1 to $2 an hour.

Then GM took their second taxpayer bailout to the tune of $49.5 billion and received bankruptcy protection in 2009 to cut its costs. (GM's first big bailout was right after Work War II.)

Auto workers in the U.S. saw their wages drop by 50% since the auto bail outs. Longtime auto workers still earn about $28 an hour (a nice middle-class wage of $58,240 a year before payroll taxes). But GM's new workers start at only $15.78 an hour, about half the prevailing rate paid to the company's production employees before the bail out --- which is about what a GM janitor was once paid in 1980, or a little more than double the minimum wage today. Yet GM's CEO Daniel F. Akerson is expected to earn at least $9 million in stock and salary in 2012.

The same for Ford, who didn't even need a bail out, but agreed to raise the hourly wages of entry-level employees from $15 an hour to about $19. Ford's CEO Alan Mulally ranked #1 in auto CEO pay with $29.5 million. Mulally's compensation was up 11% from 2010 and brings his cumulative take to $148.3 million since joining Ford six years ago. Some 120,000 Ford employees have lost jobs under Mulally's reign, and Ford shareholders saw their shares dropped 36 percent last year. So much for "pay for performance" and "job creators".

Foreign automakers are placing their U.S. factories in the southern states because of generous tax incentives and anti-union sentiment, presenting a huge challenge to the once-formidable United Auto Workers. Bob King, president of the UAW, says "We keep putting more taxes and lower wages on the people who are working in this nation and keep giving tax breaks to the wealthy," he said. "And that will destroy our democracy."

Conclusion

We can look back to the "golden era" of the middle-class, when rural folks left the farms to work in the steel mills and auto factories. The Waltons (Wal-Mart) got super-rich from their abundant labor supply of underemployed and unemployed people living in the rural anti-union south, who were desperate for employment, when even a minimum-wage job was seen as step up from rural poverty.

It was nice that Ann Romney had made the "choice" to stay at home and "work hard" raising her sons, but most average working Americans no longer have the luxury of a "choice" if they're only earning $15, $12, $10, or $7.25 an hour. They would need to earn at the very least $25 an hour to live like a steelworker or autoworker did sixty years ago.

But those jobs went overseas and across our borders, so that American corporations could pay their foreign workers at factories like Foxconn $1 an hour, while the CEOs could rake in millions every year. And that's a fact.

Yet the Republicans refuse to raise taxes on the CEOs, the rich, and themselves to help pay down government debt. They want to eliminate the current $7.25-an-hour federal minimum wage altogether, instead of raising it. The GOP wouldn't be happier if they could eliminate all labor unions, pay school teachers and firefighters half as less, lower the corporate tax rate to 0%, and force those earning only $26,364 a year to "put more skin in the game" -- and all while the GOP cuts food stamps and TANF for the poor and all of our Social Security and Medicare benefits.

The Republicans complain about the cost of welfare and food stamps, but their corporate sponsors (and people like Mitt Romney) forced these people into poverty to fatten their own wallets. If this is what's called a "shared sacrifice" by wealthy Republicans, then why would the middle-class or poor ever vote for a Republican?

That's why our solders in Iraq and Afghanistan kept re-enlisting. They had no good paying jobs to come home to. Typical pay in the military for an enlisted 20-year-old E-2 is $37,637 a year -- or married with two children is $41,021. After four years an E-4 with a wife and two children is $48,180 a year. A new officer starts at $54,800 a year. (Pay figures do not included special combat pay, reenlistment bonuses, allowances, etc.)

Tomorrow the "job creators" will pay all of us $1 an hour, just like they now do in China and Mexico today, once they make us all desperate enough for their ridiculously low-paying jobs. Corporate America is turning us into a third world county. The average "household" will no longer need two incomes to survive, but will need four incomes at the rate we're going. A vote for Mitt Romney is a vote for George W. Bush, but probably much worse.

* The Jones and Laughlin Steel Company eventually merged with Republic Steel in 1984 to form LTV Steel. In 2002 International Steel Group purchased LTV. International Steel Group was ranked #426 on the Fortune 500. It was later acquired by Mittal Steel in 2005, and in 2006 it merged with Arcelor to become the world's largest steel company, ArcelorMittal, which is headquartered in Luxembourg.