The shrinking class that is killing the US economy
![Morning commuters are seen outside the New York Stock Exchange, July 30, 2012.](https://assets.weforum.org/article/image/large_zN02e3IMcGo2ieokkNRt92CPeibXjO6vC3SHLm5BWm0.jpg)
The middle-income class is hollowing out, and it's hurting US economic growth. Image: REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
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The middle-income class is hollowing out, and it's hurting US economic growth.
Only about a quarter of a percent of US households have climbed up the ladder from the middle class into the upper-income bracket since 2000, according to the latest review by the IMF. Meanwhile, more than 3% of middle-income households have moved into the low-income bracket.
That's a flip from the trend between 1970 and 2000, where middle-income households were more likely to move upward.
Here is the International Monetary Fund on the issue (emphasis added):
Combined with real income stagnation, polarization has had a negative impact on the economy, hampering the main engine of the U.S. growth: consumption. The analysis in our new paper suggests that over 1998–2013, the U.S. economy has lost the equivalent of more than one year of consumption due to increased polarization.
That's a pretty worrying trend, considering that low- and middle-income households spend a far larger slice of their income than wealthier households.
IMF
The IMF defined middle-income households — which is often a proxy for discussions on income polarization — as those whose real incomes are within 50% to 150% of the median income.
![Cumulative consumption loss 1998-2013](https://assets.weforum.org/editor/s91XmV6UBymRV1vUL6vyycrr6LZaecQJXPt2x4FWp2o.jpg)
The share of middle-income households has shrunk to 47% in 2014 from 58% in 1970, while lower-income households' share was little changed at around 5% of total national income, the IMF report shows.
Consumers are a huge driver of the American economy, with household consumption making up more than two-thirds of GDP. We have already seen grim notes of how the more concentrated pool of wealth is affecting the creditworthiness of an average borrower.
It's not just the super rich who are at fault for the increased polarization, however. The number of men who have taken lower-paid jobs has shot up over the past four decades while that of women edged up, according to the IMF.
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