American Dreams
There
is a common response to America among foreign writers: the US is a land of
extremes where the best of things are just as easily found as the worst. This is
a cliché(陈词滥调).
In the land of black and white, people should
not be too surprised to find some of the biggest gaps between the rich and the
poor in the world. But the American Dream offers a way out to every-one.
{{U}}(46) {{/U}} No class system or government stands in the
way.
Sadly, this old argument is no longer true. Over the past
few decades there has been a fundamental shift in the structure of the American
economy:
The gap between the rich and the poor has widened and
widened. {{U}}(47) {{/U}}
Over the past 25 years the
median US family income has gone up 18 percent. For the top 1 per cent, however,
it has gone up 200 percent. Twenty-five years ago the top fifth of Americans had
an average income 6.7 times that of the bottom fifth. {{U}}(48)
{{/U}}
Inequalities have grown worse in different regions.
In California, incomes for lower class families have fallen by 4 percent since
1969. {{U}}(49) {{/U}} This has led to an economy hugely in favor of a
small group of very rich Americans. The wealthiest 1 percent of households now
control a third of the national wealth. There are now 37 million Americans
living in poverty. At 12.7 percent of the population, it is the highest
percentage in the developed world.
Yet the tax burden on
America's rich is falling, not growing. {{U}}(50) {{/U}} There was an
economic theory holding that the rich spending more would benefit everyone as a
whole. But clearly that theory has not worked in reality.
A.
Nobody is poor in the US.
B. The top 0.01 percent of households
has seen its tax bite fall by a full 25 percentage points since 1980.
C. For upper class families they have risen 41 percent.
D.
Now it is 9.8 times.
E. As it does so, the possibility to cross
that gap gets smaller and smaller.
F. All one has to do is to
work hard and climb the ladder towards the top.