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  • BILL MOYERS: This week on Moyers & Company

  • ROBERT REICH: How do you constrain capitalism from doing

  • stupid things that are not in the public interest? You have a democracy that is sufficiently

  • well-functioning. That laws and rules limit what can be done. If the democracy is corrupted

  • itself by that capitalist excess, then the first thing you've got to do is get big money

  • out of politics.

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  • BILL MOYERS: Welcome. Odds are you know of Robert Reich.

  • Perhaps as the public servant he was under three administrationsfor his work as

  • President Clinton’s Secretary of Labor, “Time Magazinecalled him one of the

  • best cabinet secretaries of the 20th century.

  • He’s written thirteen books, including his latest, “Beyond Outrage: What Has Gone Wrong

  • with Our Economy and Our Democracy, and How to Fix It.”

  • But youre about to see professor Reich who teaches public policy at the University

  • of California, Berkeley, in a wholly new light: as the star of a dynamic, witty, and entertaining

  • new film to be released next week in theatres across the country. It’s calledInequality

  • For All,’ and was directed by Jacob Kornbluth. Here’s the trailer:

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality For All: Now the thing you want to know about this

  • Mini Cooper is it is small. We are in proportion, me and my car. My name is Robert Reich, I

  • was Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton. Before that the Carter administration. Before

  • that I was a special aid to Abraham Lincoln. Of all developed nations the United States

  • has the most unequal distribution of income and were surging toward even greater inequality.

  • 1928 and 2007 become the peak years for income concentration, it looks like a suspension

  • bridge.

  • WOMAN in Inequality For All: Last year we made $36,000.

  • MAN in Inequality For All: Think I probably make $50,000 a year working

  • 70 hours a week.

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality For All: The middle class is struggling. People occasionally

  • say to me, “Now what nation does it better?” The answer is, the United States. In the decades

  • after World War II, the economy boomed but you had very low inequality.

  • BILL O’REILLY in Inequality For All: Do you know Robert Reich?

  • MAN in Inequality For All: I do.

  • BILL O’REILLY in Inequality For All: He’s a communist.

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality For All: When I was a kid, bigger boys would pick on

  • me. I think it changed my life. I had to protect people from the people who would beat them

  • up economically. Who is actually looking out for the American worker? The answer is, nobody.

  • If workers don’t have power, if they don’t have a voice, their wages and benefits start

  • eroding. We are losing equal opportunity in America. Any one of you who feels cynical

  • just consider where we have been.

  • BILL MOYERS: That’s from "Inequality For All," starring

  • Robert Reich, who is with me now. Bob Reich, welcome.

  • ROBERT REICH: Thank you, Bill.

  • BILL MOYERS: I think this film is a game-changer in this

  • discussion about inequality. But I am curious because you're encroaching on my turf. Why

  • you turn to film to tell this story?

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, it was Jake's idea. And he really is

  • the brains and the creative giant behind it. But I was easily persuadable because I've

  • tried everything else. You know--

  • BILL MOYERS: Thirteen books--

  • ROBERT REICH: --I mean--

  • BILL MOYERS: --a blog--

  • ROBERT REICH: And television and so on. But there is something

  • about film. With which you can emotionally connect with people and open people's minds

  • and eyes and hearts. And on this issue of widening inequality there's so much confusion,

  • many people if theyre, you know, if they're rightwing, they want to blame the poor, if

  • they're leftwing they want to blame the rich.

  • There's a lot of blame going around. But people are not looking at the actual structure of

  • the economy as it's evolving. They're not looking at how we need to change the organization

  • of the economy, why we are the most unequal of all advanced societies and economies in

  • the world.

  • There is this popular misconception that the economy is kind of out there, it's kind of

  • natural forces that can't be changed. They're immutable. We all sort of work for this economy.

  • But in reality, the economy is a set of rules. There's no economy in the state of nature.

  • Theyre rules. I mean, there are rules about property and liability and anti-trust and

  • bankruptcy and subsidies for certain things and taxes for certain things.

  • These rules really are the rules of the game. They determine economic outcomes. If we don't

  • like them, we can change the rules. I mean, if we had a democracy that was working as

  • a democracy should be working, we could adapt the rules so that, for example, the gains

  • of economic growth were more widely distributed without a sacrifice of efficiency or innovation.

  • BILL MOYERS: Those rules are difficult to explain in writing,

  • much less on film. And yet you and Kornbluth do very well at it. Let me play an excerpt

  • for our audience to see how you did it.

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality for All: Of all developed nations today, the United

  • States has the most unequal distribution of income and wealth by far. And we're surging

  • towards even greater inequality. One way of looking at and measuring inequality is to

  • look at the earnings of people at the top versus the earnings of the typical worker

  • in the middle.

  • The typical male worker in 1978 was making around $48,000, adjusting for inflation, while

  • the average person in the top one percent earned $390,000. Now fast forward. By 2010,

  • the typical male worker earned even less than he did then. But at person the top got more

  • than twice as much as before. Today, the richest 400 Americans have more wealth than the bottom

  • 150 million of us put together. Now think about it. Four hundred people have more wealth

  • than half the population of the United States.

  • BILL MOYERS: And that wealth is increasing.

  • ROBERT REICH: It’s increasing.

  • BILL MOYERS: At the top.

  • ROBERT REICH: Yes, the latest data we have from one of my

  • colleagues at Berkeley, Emmanuel Saez, and his colleague Thomas Piketty, who had been

  • the pioneer researchers in this field, because they've been looking at a source that nobody

  • else has been looking at, IRS data going back to, really the beginning, 1913, the beginning

  • of the progressive income tax.

  • BILL MOYERS: And you featured their work in the film.

  • ROBERT REICH: Yes. Since the film, actually we put the film

  • together, there are new results that came out just within the last week or so show that

  • in the year 2012 inequality reached a new peak in the United States.

  • The previous peak, we thought was the peak, that is 2007 actually has been superseded

  • by this new peak of inequality, concentrated income in 2012 that almost all the gains of

  • economic growth have been going to a very small number of people at the very top.

  • BILL MOYERS: The figures are so startling, I had to shake

  • my head in disbelief when I first saw them, showing that in the first three years of the

  • recovery from the recession brought on by the financial collapse in 2008, the top one

  • percent of Americans took home 95 percent of the income gains. Ninety-five percent?

  • ROBERT REICH: That's right. As the economy grows it used

  • to be, you know, within the memory of many of us, myself included, between 1946 and 1978,

  • as the economy grew, everybody benefited. It was very wide-- the benefits were very

  • widely dispersed.

  • BILL MOYERS: Shared prosperity we called it.

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, we called it shared prosperity. It wasn't

  • socialism. I mean, Eisenhower was president through most of that. And we didn't consider

  • it abnormal. We considered it normal. As the economy grows, we should all get something.

  • And during those years, the economy doubled in size and everybody's income doubled. Even

  • if you were in the bottom fifth of the income earners you did actually better.

  • And then, and this is really the subject of the film. Something happened in the late 1970s,

  • early 1980s, to change the historic relationship between economic growth and the growth in

  • productivity on the one hand and wages. Beginning in the late '70s and really to a greater and

  • greater degree over the last three decades, all the wealth, or most of the wealth, most

  • of the new wealth in society went right to the top.

  • Income gains went right to the top and people in the middle, the median worker, the median

  • wage, stagnated. In fact since the year 2000, if you adjust for inflation, you have to adjust

  • for inflation, the actual median wage has been dropping. It's now five percent below

  • what it was then.

  • BILL MOYERS: So help us understand in practical terms what

  • it means when the layman or woman reads that the top one percent of Americans took home

  • 95 percent of the income gains. How can that be?

  • ROBERT REICH: I think that most people, if they really understand

  • it, will say: "This is not the America that I should be part of. This is not an economy

  • that is working as it should be working. Something is fundamentally wrong." And the game feels

  • rigged somehow.

  • And I think that's the conclusion that many people are coming to regardless of whether

  • you are, consider yourself, on the left or the right. Many Tea Partiers are angry at

  • the system because there seems to be so much collusion between government and big business

  • and Wall Street. That's where the Tea Party movement came from.

  • BILL MOYERS: Yeah. That was-- that intrigued me back when

  • Occupy happened, that it and the Tea Party were both about the one percent.

  • ROBERT REICH: Both about what looked like a fundamentally

  • unfair subsidy going from everybody, taxpayers, to mostly the top one percent, that is the

  • people on Wall Street who had blown it. Who had basically treated the economy as a casino

  • for much of their own benefit. And leaving many of the rest of us underwater in terms

  • of being able to pay our mortgages, with our savings depleted because the stock market

  • had basically reversed itself, and jobless.

  • BILL MOYERS: And here we are, five years after Lehman Brothers

  • collapsed and Wall Street went south and you say that the banks, the big banks are still

  • at it, still gambling?

  • ROBERT REICH: Unfortunately, they are. We don't even have

  • a Volcker Rule. Remember when we had the Dodd-Frank Act that was supposed to clean up all of this?

  • And a piece of it was kind of a watered-down Glass-Steagall. Glass-Steagall was the old

  • 1930s rule that said you had to split your commercial banking operations from your, basically

  • your casino, betting operations. And--

  • BILL MOYERS: You couldn't bet with my deposit.

  • ROBERT REICH: You can't bet with commercially-insured deposits.

  • But we couldn't even get the watered-down version of Glass-Steagall in the form of the

  • Volcker Rule. It's still not there. Why isn't that there?

  • Because you've got a huge, powerful, Wall Street lobbying machine, a lot of money coming

  • from Wall Street that influenced politicians, even Democrat politicians. This is not a matter

  • of partisan politics. Everybody is guilty. And the money is still determining what the

  • rules of the game are going to be.

  • BILL MOYERS: And these are the people who are taking in

  • most of the income produced by the recovery.

  • ROBERT REICH: Not only they-- they're taking in most of

  • the income produced by the recovery, they're enjoying almost all of the economic gains

  • and they are using their privileged position with regard to political power to entrench

  • themselves in terms of their economic gains of the future and their political influence

  • in the future.

  • So you know, it's not unusual that many average people who are working harder than ever, worried

  • about their jobs, worried about paying their next, you know, bills, living from paycheck

  • to paycheck, are going to stay, you know, beginning to say to themselves, "There is

  • something fundamentally wrong here."

  • BILL MOYERS: The film does splendidly show what's happened

  • to blue-collar and white-collar workers, or what you call "flat-lining."

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality for All: Contrary to popular mythology, globalization

  • and technology haven't really reduced the number of jobs available to Americans. These

  • transformations have reduced their pay. It is not just that wages are stagnated.

  • But when you take into consideration rising costs. The rising cost of rent or homes, dramatically-increasing

  • costs of healthcare, the rising costs of childcare and also the rising costs of higher education,

  • rising much faster than inflation, take all of these into consideration, and you find

  • that it's much worse than just stagnating wages. It's basically middle-class families,

  • often with two wage earners, working harder and harder and harder and getting nowhere.

  • BILL MOYERS: What do you mean "getting nowhere"?

  • ROBERT REICH: They are not seeing their incomes increase

  • if you adjust for inflation. And obviously you-- in terms of repurchasing power. Many

  • of them are seeing their incomes drop. They also are having less and less, enjoying less

  • and less economic security. Because at any time they can be fired. You have two incomes

  • they depend on.

  • So the chance of something happening, like a firing or a company basically leaving town

  • or one of them getting very sick and not being able to pull in that kind of income. All of

  • those negative possibilities are themselves increasing. And meanwhile, upward mobility

  • is fading. We used to have in this country the notion that anybody with enough guts and

  • gumption could make it.

  • So even if you have wide inequality, it was okay because you could make it. You could

  • feast at the same table if you stuck to it and if you really tried hard. That's disappearing.

  • Forty-two percent of children who were born into poverty, for example, in the United States,

  • will be in poverty as adults and at a higher percentage than any other advanced country.

  • Even great Britain, with a history of class. I mean, we think about Britain, we think of

  • a class or rigid class structure. Only 30 percent of the kids who were born into poverty

  • remain in poverty as adults. Because you see upward mobility is more of a reality in these

  • other countries than it is now in present-day America.

  • BILL MOYERS: But talk a little bit further about corporate

  • behavior. If they're sitting on record profits, and no one denies that, why aren't they creating

  • more jobs? The argument goes that corporations should be taxed at a lower level so they can

  • create jobs. Or that money-- that the rich shouldn't be taxed because they're job creators.

  • ROBERT REICH: This is where the problem really reaches back

  • onto itself and explains itself. Where we're in a giant vicious cycle. Because if the middle

  • class and everybody aspiring to join middle class don't have enough money. If their wages

  • are declining, their benefits are almost non-existent, they're worried about the next paycheck. They

  • cannot turn around and buy what the economy is capable of producing. And in this country,

  • 70 percent of the economy is consumer spending.

  • So if you've got this giant middle class and everybody wanting to join the middle class,

  • and they don't have the purchasing power any longer because most of the benefits of the

  • economy are going to the very top, and the top is, certainly, they're the ones who are

  • saving. Their savings going around the world, wherever they can get the highest return on

  • those savings. You don't have enough aggregate demand in the economy to make it worthwhile

  • for companies to hire more people and expand.

  • BILL MOYERS: Don't you think the CEO's understand that?

  • ROBERT REICH: They understand the next quarter. They understand

  • what's immediately in front of their noses. I mean, Wall Street is saying to them, "Don't

  • plan for the long-term future. Give us the highest return we can possibly get." And so

  • the average CEO says "Well, I have the best, you know, they're not all that many customers.

  • I'm not selling like I used to be selling. So the easiest way of showing big returns

  • is I shrink my payrolls, I get lean and mean and maybe I outsource, maybe I automate whatever

  • I have to do to get the cost down." Bill, I'm not blaming CEOs. This film is not about

  • blame.

  • But the fact of the matter is that the entire system is designed in such a way that everybody

  • is acting rationally, given what the rules of the game are. But the rules of the game

  • themselves are irrational, and irrational socially. They are not generating the kind

  • of prosperous society that we need to maintain an economy and also to maintain a democracy.

  • BILL MOYERS: For example, in terms of the people inside

  • the system acting rationally, Microsoft recently bought the Finnish company Nokia. And I heard

  • an eye-opening, ear-opening discussion of that by David Brancaccio on Public Radio's

  • "Marketplace," where you often appear. He's talking with Allan Sloan, who's the senior

  • editor-at-large atFortune Magazine.”

  • DAVID BRANCACCIO on Marketplace: Morning, Allan.

  • ALLAN SLOAN on Marketplace: Good morning, David.

  • DAVID BRANCACCIO on Marketplace: So I was writing the story the other day about

  • Microsoft buying Nokia, and I'm thinking, "They wanted a nice manufacturer of smartphones.”

  • You're saying there was more to it than that?

  • ALLAN SLOAN on Marketplace: Right. Microsoft has all this money overseas.

  • And it can't bring it back into the United States without, God forbid, paying tax. So

  • it's using it to buy a big foreign operation.

  • DAVID BRANCACCIO on Marketplace: So it's got this money rattling around, it

  • might be nice if it bought something with it from its perspective rather than paying

  • taxes, and it sees Nokia as an opportunity. Is this unprecedented?

  • ALLAN SLOAN on Marketplace: Hardly. Two years ago, Microsoft did the same

  • thing with Skype and a company called Cisco, which is what's known in the trade as a serial

  • acquirer, something that buys one thing after another. It's taken a holy oath not to buy

  • anything in the United States unless the tax laws change.

  • BILL MOYERS: So it's more profitable to buy a company abroad

  • than it is to bring your profits that you've earned overseas home and pay taxes on them?

  • That's logical within the system?

  • ROBERT REICH: Within the system, it's logical. But here's

  • where blame is deserved. Because you see very wealthy people, not everyone, but many very

  • wealthy people and many big corporations use their money to buy rules that favor their

  • positioning.

  • Tax laws that improve their competitive position, that entrench their wealth; antitrust enforcement

  • that may go against their competitor, certainly not against them; intellectual property laws

  • that guarantee them a nice profit and extend the length of their patents or trademarks.

  • And we could go through a whole list, Bill. I mean, the point is that with large size

  • and a lot of money goes a great deal of political power. And the more uneven the playing field,

  • the more you concentrate income and wealth at the top, the more you are susceptible as

  • a society to this kind of corruption. And it is corruption.

  • BILL MOYERS: There are people who disagree with us on this,

  • as I'm sure you know. They even celebrate inequality. When former Senator Rick Santorum

  • was running for the Republican nomination for president last year, he made a speech

  • at the Detroit Economic Club.

  • RICK SANTORUM at Detroit Economic Club: President Obama is all about equality of results.

  • I'm about equality of opportunity. I'm not about equality of result when it comes to

  • income inequality. There is income inequality in America. There always has been and hopefully,

  • and I do say that, there always will be. Why? Because people rise to different levels of

  • success based on what they contribute to society and to the marketplace and that's as it should

  • be.

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, first of all, let's be clear about what

  • we are arguing. Rick Santorum is exactly right in saying that nobody should expect or even

  • advocate equality of outcome. The real problem is that we don't have equality of opportunity.

  • What do I mean by that? Number one, the schools available to poor and lower middle class and

  • many middle class families and their kids are not nearly as good as the schools available

  • to the wealthy.

  • The tax laws are weighted increasingly in favor of the wealthy. Therefore a lot of middle

  • class and poor people actually are paying, particularly through social security taxes,

  • which nobody talks about. They all want to talk about income taxes. They're paying a

  • much larger share of their income.

  • The laws governing almost everything we can imagine are tilted toward shareholders away

  • from those whose major asset is your house. So it's not equality of opportunity. That's

  • the problem. If we really had equality of opportunity we wouldn't even be having this

  • discussion.

  • I think again, it's important to bear in mind that some inequality is necessary if we're

  • going to have a capitalist system that creates incentives for people to work hard and to

  • invent and to try very hard. The question is not inequality, per se.

  • The question is, at what point do you tip over, do you get to a tipping point where

  • the degree of inequality actually is threatening your economy, your society, your democracy?

  • When do you reach a point where inequality is simply too much? Where most of your people

  • feel like the game is rigged.

  • BILL MOYERS: The film makes it clear. You think we are

  • reaching that tipping point, that we're just right there.

  • ROBERT REICH: I think that in terms of the economy, we are

  • very close. In fact, the Great Recession-- it has many causes. But one of the major causes

  • was that the last coping mechanism that the middle class used, even though their wages

  • were flat or declining, to continue to spend and keep the economy going was to borrow against

  • their homes. And that, of course, exploded in everybody's face. You couldn't do that.

  • So there's no longer a coping mechanism. One reason why the recovery has been so anemic

  • is that you don't have enough purchasing power in your society because all of the gains are

  • going to a very small number at the top. So you don't have to wait and say, "Well, we're

  • going to get that tipping point economically, 'cause we're already there."

  • Fact of the matter is, most Americans now are losing faith in our democracy. Which seems

  • to me, you know, is our most precious gift, the most precious legacy that we have to hand

  • down to our future generations.

  • BILL MOYERS: I particularly like the suspension bridge

  • analogy.

  • ROBERT REICH in Inequality for All: This graph becomes very central for explaining

  • what has happened to the U.S. economy, and indeed what's happening and has happened to

  • our society. It looks like a suspension bridge. What happened a year after 1928? The Great

  • Crash. And what happened just after 2007? Another crash. The parallels are breathtaking

  • if you look at them carefully.

  • Leading up to these two peak years, as income got more and more concentrated, in fewer and

  • fewer hands, the wealthy turn to the financial sector. And in both periods, the financial

  • sector bloomed. They focused on a limited number of assets, housing, gold, speculative

  • instruments, debt instruments. And that creates a speculative bubble in both times.

  • We often note that the middle class in both periods, their incomes were stagnating and

  • they went deeper and deeper into debt to maintain their living standards. And that creates a

  • debt bubble. That's why you see in both these periods economic instability. What makes an

  • economy stable is a strong middle class.

  • BILL MOYERS: I think most people would agree with you that

  • the middle class is the linchpin of stability in the economy and in the democracy. But for

  • the purposes of this discussion, can you tell us what you mean when you use the term middle

  • class?

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, there's no official definition. And

  • I would say people who self-identify as middle class extend from people who are earning around

  • $25,000 a year to people who are earningwell, in major cities, expensive cities like

  • New York or San Francisco, a lot of people call themselves middle class who are earning

  • $200,000 a year because the cost of living is so high. But in-- however you define it,

  • you're talking about the great bulk of Americans clustered around the median, not the average.

  • I want to emphasize there are measurement issues all over here. And--

  • BILL MOYERS: That's what makes it so hard for--

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, it's hard and also is ripe for people

  • who want to deny the truth because they can say, "Well, we're measuring it wrong." The

  • fact of the matter is that I distinguish between median and average because, you know, the

  • basketball player Shaquille O'Neal and I have an average height of six foot one. I mean,

  • you know, I'm very short.

  • But what we know is that averages are always pulled up by people at the top. And that's

  • true of income as well. When you have a cluster of extraordinarily wealthy people they bring

  • up the average wage. Or the average income. You need to look at the median.

  • That is half of the people above, half of the people below. That gives you a sense of

  • where the middle really, you know, is. And the median is going down. If you adjust for

  • inflation, the median, the median wage, the median income, is heading downward.

  • BILL MOYERS: That intrigues me because Richard Burkhauser,

  • who's a scholar at Cornell University and at the conservative American Enterprise Institute,

  • challenges the conventional wisdom, yours and mine and others about income inequality.

  • First, he's not only argued that the condition of the poor and middle class is improving,

  • more recently, he and some of his colleagues have come up with statistical findings. That

  • not only wipe out inequality trends all together, but purport to show that, the poor and middle

  • classes have done better on a percentage basis than the rich.

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, they're tricks of the trade. He's using

  • one of those tricks. He's not here to defend himself, so let me be very careful to give,

  • you know, just as much justice as possible to what he's arguing. He, in calculating income

  • gains for the median worker, uses the assumed increase in the value of the home up until

  • 2007.

  • And because home values were rising and many families own their own home in middle-class

  • families, even lower middle-class families, he assumes that they got the benefits of those

  • income gains. Well, that's just silly. Most people could not sell. If they tried to sell,

  • they'd have to buy another house that was just as expensive.

  • And they don't-- their quality of life, their standard of living is not really affected.

  • And more over, it was a bubble. And back in 2007, 2008-- those gains disappeared. So that's

  • a statistical trick. It has nothing to do with how real people live.

  • BILL MOYERS: Speaking of real people, we began this series

  • last year with three broadcasts on inequality. And in the first one we introduced our audience

  • to a woman living in Iowa named Amanda Greubel. She had been part of testimonies before the

  • Senate on how the middle-class families are struggling to make ends meet. “Stories from

  • the Kitchen Tableit was called.

  • When the state cut funding for local school districts, her salary was reduced by $10,000.

  • AMANDA GREUBEL: $10,000 might not seem like a lot to some

  • people. But that loss of income required a complete financial, emotional, and spiritual

  • overhaul in our family […] It means that most of our clothing comes from Good Will,

  • garage sales, and the clearance racks because we try not to spend full price on anything

  • anymore […] If my family, with two Master's degrees is struggling, you can imagine how

  • bad it is for other people. The past few years, our school district has seen our percentage

  • of students on free and reduced lunch increase steadily. In a community that has a reputation

  • of being very well off, over 30 percent of our elementary-level students qualified for

  • that program this year.

  • I've sat with parents as they completed that eligibility application and they cried tears

  • of shame. And they say things like, "I never thought I'd have to do this," and "I've never

  • needed this help before." […] Sometimes their clothing becomes more tattered, and

  • we see parents cut the toes off of tennis shoes to accommodate a few more months worth

  • of growth and let those shoes last just a little bit longer.

  • ROBERT REICH: In this day and age, Bill-- in fact, there

  • is no guarantee that somebody in the middle class, seemingly safely in the middle class,

  • won't fall into poverty. We used to talk about the poor as a separate group. The middle class

  • was here, the poor was here. Michael Harrington, you remember in his great bookThe Other

  • Americawhich focused the nation's attention on a separate group of people that was really

  • struggling in ways that we didn't even know. Today, fast forward to the year 2013 and you

  • have a middle class that is very close to the poor in the sense that over a ten-year

  • period, a large percentage of the people in the middle class, who are earning, let's say,

  • $50,000 a year, $35,000 a year, $26,000 a year, find themselves suddenly, almost without

  • warning, because they lose a job, because they've got a health crisis, because something

  • else comes up, they're poor. They're on food stamps, they are humiliated.

  • And this is a fear that justifiably and understandably haunts America today. I think it's why so

  • many people are so frustrated and so angry, because it's not just that they're working

  • harder and getting nowhere. But they are worried that they are only one or two or three paychecks

  • away from poverty.

  • That they have not saved. That if they have saved, they know that their savings are not

  • going to go nearly far enough. They can't save for their children's education. They

  • know that their kids are going to be burdened by huge student debt. They say to themselves,

  • "Look, this economy is supposed to be working for me if I'm working for it." But that basic

  • bargain at the heart of the economy seems to have been broken.

  • BILL MOYERS: What about the poor? We all talk about the

  • middle class. But very few politicians, and even increasingly fewer journalists are talking

  • about the poor and the people who are not in the middle and are likely never to get

  • into the middle class. We almost never hear that word "poverty," even from President Obama.

  • ROBERT REICH: We've got to a point where money is so powerful

  • a force in politics and in the media, that attention is paid mostly to people who are

  • wealthy or upper middle class. They define what it is that politicians are looking at

  • and concerned about and what it is that the media are covering.

  • And I wish that were not the case. But in fact as a practical reality, that is the case.

  • We no longer have powerful trade unions that used to define the working class. We no longer

  • have a visible and potent poor people's movement such as we had in the 1960s, War on Poverty.

  • We no longer have a society that has the kind of countervailing power that we used to have

  • that enabled people who were struggling to have a voice.

  • BILL MOYERS: The Cato Institute recently came out with

  • a study that showed there are 126 federal programs to help people in need. And the argument--

  • I'm simplifying a very complicated and interesting study.

  • But they're arguing that the problem is so many people are now getting relief of some

  • kind from the federal government or the state governments that they don't feel this anxiety,

  • they don't feel this motivation to get a job because if they do, they lose some of those

  • benefits. Is there any truth in that?

  • ROBERT REICH: I suppose there are some individuals around

  • who are getting many benefits, therefore don't have an incentive to work hard. But the fact

  • of the matter is right now you got three people who are out of work, looking for work, needing

  • a job, for every job that is available. So don't tell me that unemployment insurance,

  • which only covers 60 percent of the unemployed to begin with is keeping people out of work.

  • And welfare, we got rid of welfare in the 1990s. We now have a temporary program that

  • is supposed to tide people over, that gives them five years in their lifetime of help.

  • That can't be keeping people from working. Food stamps is a supplement.

  • The reason a lot of people are on food stamps these days is because their wages are so low

  • they can't maintain a family. They can't get out of poverty, and they have to rely on food

  • stamps. So somebody says, "Oh, it's all because of food stamps," is not looking at reality.

  • BILL MOYERS: You and I both remember a different time,

  • what we once called "shared prosperity." I was a child of the Depression, but in the

  • post-war period, I was the beneficiary of my generation, the beneficiary of that upward

  • mobility that came from all the money being spent on war being brought home and invested

  • in our economy. There's a segment in your film about the virtuous cycle.

  • What's happened to the virtuous cycle?

  • ROBERT REICH: It has turned, over the last three decades,

  • into much more of a vicious cycle. That is you've got almost all the gains from growth

  • going to the very top, most Americans are not sharing in it. They are therefore constrained

  • in terms of purchasing goods and services that the economy, under full employment, could

  • otherwise produce.

  • So you've got these periods of very high unemployment, you've got chronically slow economic growth,

  • you've got booms and busts, you've got government that can no longer afford to do a lot of the

  • things the government was doing because the tax receipts, the wealthy are able to get

  • the tax loopholes and get their taxes down; the middle class is not earning enough to

  • pay a lot in terms of income taxes; and so government investment is withdrawn.

  • Infrastructure is sort of crumbling in terms of deferred maintenance. Our schools are not

  • nearly what they need to be to compete in the 21st century global economy, and many

  • people are left out. You see how everything relates to everything else, Bill. It becomes

  • a vicious cycle rather than a virtuous cycle. And if you just look at one little piece of

  • it, you don't see how everything is connected.

  • BILL MOYERS: But something had to interrupt that cycle,

  • or several things had to interrupt that the cycle. Can you point, you're not a finger-pointer

  • or a blame thrower, but can you point to actual causes of the interrupting of the virtuous

  • cycle?

  • ROBERT REICH: Essentially, if you look at the forces that

  • are changing, fundamentally changing the underlying structure of the economy-- there are two.

  • And they really exert their full force by the late 1970s, beginning of the 1980s. One,

  • globalization. The second is technological change.

  • Both of them displace a lot of workers. Or at least force a lot of middle class into

  • lower paid or more precarious work. Now the real story here is not globalization and technological

  • change. But even-- we're not going to stop these forces. We shouldn't try to stop these

  • forces. We can't become neo-luddites and smash all the technology.

  • The real problem is that we didn't adapt. We didn't change public policies. We didn't

  • change the rules of the game to provide more opportunities, to provide more upward mobility

  • to make sure that the economy was nevertheless not withstanding globalization and technological

  • change, still going to work for the benefit of most people. We could have done it. We

  • didn't.

  • BILL MOYERS: You say in the film that one of the reasons

  • for the flat-lining of wages, is the decline of unions brought on by globalization and

  • technology, as you just said. You never mentioned NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement,

  • that as Bill Clinton's Secretary of Labor, you helped to bring about. Any regrets there?

  • ROBERT REICH: Well internally, I can't really-- I still

  • don't feel completely free to tell you what the internal debates were. But I can tell

  • you, that I have publicly stated for years that the labor-side agreements that would

  • guarantee labor rights and the environmental-side agreements that would guarantee environmental

  • protection in NAFTA were not strong enough, not nearly strong enough. And if you pressed

  • me a little bit, I might tell you that I thought the making NAFTA a priority at that point

  • in the administration I think was, I said was, bad at the time, and I still think it

  • was the wrong priority.

  • BILL MOYERS: Why did the president push it so hard?

  • ROBERT REICH: Why does any president create the priorities

  • he has? I mean look, we can have the most talented people in the White House we can

  • come up with. But if Americans don't understand what's at stake and are not pushing good people

  • in government to do the right thing, eventually the moneyed interests are going to win out

  • because there's nobody else that is loud enough to be heard.

  • BILL MOYERS: Well, that seems to me to be the central dilemma,

  • which is that the powerful interests had bought the rule-making machine.

  • ROBERT REICH: They have. But that doesn't mean that is inevitable.

  • I mean, what the powerful moneyed interests would like in this country is for us all to

  • get so cynical about politics that we basically give up and say, "Okay, you want our democracy?

  • Take it." Then they win everything.

  • One of the purposes of this film, Bill, is to make sure people understand that the only

  • way we're going to get the economy to work for everybody and our society, once again

  • to live up to the values of equal opportunity that at least we aspire to, is if we're mobilized,

  • if we're energized. If we take citizenship to mean not simply voting and paying taxes

  • and showing up for jury duty. But actually, participating in an active way, shutting off

  • the television--

  • BILL MOYERS: Some exceptions excluded.

  • ROBERT REICH: --if you don't mind, there's some exception.

  • And spending an hour or two a day on our, in our communities, on our state even on national

  • politics and putting pressure on people who should be doing the public's business instead

  • of the business of the moneyed interests to actually respond to what's needed.

  • BILL MOYERS: You have many followers, as you know. And

  • several of them had written me, knowing that you were coming, to ask questions they say

  • they would like to ask you, if they had met you in the airport, for example.

  • One of them, named Arizona Mildman, says "Okay, what does Rob Reich think our direction should

  • be? What would be what we might call the Reich financial recovery plan that would heal and

  • recover this economy?"

  • ROBERT REICH: The core principle is that we want an economy

  • that works for everyone, not just for a small elite. We want equal opportunity, not equality

  • of outcome. We want to make sure that there's upward mobility again, in our society and

  • in our economy. Now how do we achieve that?

  • There is not a magic bullet. But we've got to understand that the economy is a system

  • of rules. And we can change the rules if we are organized and mobilized in order to change

  • the rules in ways that make the economy work for us. Why shouldn't we have a minimum wage

  • that is at least as high as, adjusted for inflation, the minimum wage was in 1968? I

  • mean, that would be $10.40 today. But the society is so much more productive. If we

  • figured productivity into that, it would be at least $15 an hour.

  • We ought to have Glass-- you know, the Glass-Steagall Act ought to be resurrected, so that there

  • is that wall between commercial and investment banking, so we don't have too big to fail

  • banks that wreak havoc on the economy and on the middle class and the poor.

  • We ought to cap the size of the banks. And we ought to make sure that the banks are not

  • as large and as powerful as they are right now. We've got to make sure that the earned

  • income tax credit is larger. That's a wage subsidy. It was a conservative idea. But it's

  • very important to people.

  • We've got to have a tax code that is equitable. And I'm not just talking about income tax.

  • I'm talking about Social Security taxes. Exempt the first $15,000 of income from Social Security

  • taxes. Everybody's. And take off the ceiling on the portion of income subjected to Social

  • Security taxes. And so it makes that system much more equitable. I mean, we can go piece

  • by piece through it, Bill. The point is that we can do it if we understand the nature of

  • the problem. That's what this film is all about.

  • BILL MOYERS: And Linda Kasel wants to knowwhat Robert

  • Reich thinks unions can do to transform themselves again to be relevant agents of change?”

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, one thing we've got to unionize. I say

  • we because it's not just the trade unions. We all as a nation I think have a responsibility

  • to make sure that poor workers in big-box retailers like Walmart or in fast food giant

  • fast-food companies, McDonald's and others that they can unionize that they can therefore

  • have enough power to get a piece of the action.

  • These workers, these poor workers in retail and restaurant and hotel and hospital they

  • don't have to worry about foreign competition because they're providing services right here.

  • They don't have to worry about automation because the essence of what they're doing

  • is a personal, personal service.

  • And so they can be unionized. And many of these companies are so profitable and they

  • are very competitive, they're not going to pass on the costs immediately to consumers.

  • They want to keep down their costs. This is a perfect sector in which unions need to be

  • active.

  • BILL MOYERS: You've been in a feud with Walmart recently.

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, look, let's be clear. I have nothing

  • against Walmart. But Walmart is the largest employer in the United States. Now if we were

  • back in the 1950s, General Motors was the largest employer of the United States. General

  • Motors in today's dollars was then paying its workers about $50 to $60 an hour. Today,

  • Walmart is paying its average worker, including its part-timers, $8.80 an hour.

  • What do you-- I mean, does the biggest employer in the United States not have some responsibilities

  • here? I mean, the rest of us are supplementing Walmart pay through food stamps and through

  • everything else that we provide to give people who are working at Walmart enough money so

  • that they can stay out of poverty. But doesn't the biggest employer in the United States

  • have any social responsibility whatsoever?

  • BILL MOYERS: And you've been circulating or asking people

  • to sign a petition that would do what?

  • ROBERT REICH: It's a petition to the CEOs of Walmart and

  • McDonald's as the exemplars in these two big, big sectors of the economy, employing huge

  • numbers of people to raise their wages to $15 an hour. Which it seems to me we ought

  • to be able to, as a society, afford it. These companies can certainly afford it. They are

  • so big and so powerful, why not?

  • These workers, unlike 30 years ago, where fast-food workers and workers in big-box retailers

  • were often teenagers-- the typical worker in these places is an adult is bringing home

  • at least half of family income and these are very profitable companies.

  • BILL MOYERS: Suzanne Featherstone has a question for you,

  • quote, "Given the current inequality of wealth, how long would it take under your proposed

  • tax rate changes for wealth equality to return to what it was in the 1950s?" And I should

  • say that there's a section in the film where you talk about how the earned tax rate was,

  • in the '50s, was 70 percent, I think.

  • ROBERT REICH: Well, actually, under Eisenhower, the top

  • marginal tax rate was 91 percent. But even if you consider all the deductions in tax

  • credits, the typical person at the very top of the heap was paying over 50 percent, federal

  • income taxes. Now that's completely out of the political discussion now. That was the

  • norm under Dwight Eisenhower, Republican president Dwight Eisenhower. Now how long would it take?

  • Well, that's just one piece of it. I don't--

  • BILL MOYERS: You wouldn't propose politically going back

  • to 91 percent on the marginal tax rate, would you?

  • ROBERT REICH: I would propose going back to a marginal tax

  • rate that was the effective tax rate in the 1950s. That is-- it seems to me that a 52

  • percent effective tax rate, if we-- you know, 1950s were not a period of slow growth. In

  • fact, in those years, from 1946 to 1978, when the top marginal tax rate was never below

  • 70 percent, those years had more economic growth per year than we've had since. So anybody

  • who says that, "Well, you've got to reduce taxes to get growth," doesn't even know history.

  • BILL MOYERS: Abby Arletto wants to know, "Do you think

  • American culture is fundamentally irreconcilable now with a viable labor movement and our social

  • democracy?"

  • ROBERT REICH: It's a valid question. But people, you know,

  • there's some people who may be watching this program who want to throw up their hands and

  • say, "Well, capitalism can't possibly work." Let me just make it clear. There's no other

  • system, no other economic system in global history that has worked as well as capitalism.

  • Our goal and the goal of America as a capitalist democracy has never been to get rid of capitalism.

  • But time and again, we have saved capitalism from its own excesses. In other words, what

  • we did in the progressive era between 1901 and 1916 and what we did in the 1930s in the

  • New Deal and what we did again in the war on poverty, and what we did again to some

  • extent in the 1990s is to prevent capitalism from going off the rails, to make sure that

  • capitalism is working as it should work.

  • BILL MOYERS: To be a brake.

  • ROBERT REICH: As an engine of prosperity for most people.

  • BILL MOYERS: To be sort of a brake on the excesses of private

  • power, private greed?

  • ROBERT REICH: The excesses of greed and power, and the money

  • that can corrupt, otherwise, a democratic process. How do you constrain capitalism from

  • doing stupid things that are not in the public interest? You have a democracy that is sufficiently

  • well-functioning. That laws and rules limit what can be done. If the democracy is corrupted

  • itself by that capitalist excess, then the first thing you've got to do is get big money

  • out of politics.

  • BILL MOYERS: So is this a moral or systemic dilemma?

  • ROBERT REICH: I would say it's both, Bill. It's certainly

  • a moral dilemma, because it has to do with the foundation stone of this country, which

  • is equal opportunity. If we can't fix it, we're going to lose equal opportunity as a

  • practical reality. It's also systemic in the sense that if we don't do something about

  • this, our economy is going to continue to sputter. It's going to continue to be prone

  • to high unemployment and booms and busts and basically instability. And our democracy is

  • going to be subject to the kind of cynicism that makes it ripe for demagogues on the right

  • or the left to basically conjure up scapegoats and create very ugly society.

  • BILL MOYERS: That's a hopeless, grim scenario.

  • ROBERT REICH: It is not hopeless, Bill. This is the most

  • important point. I mean, if people are hopeless, they don't know history. If you and I were

  • having this conversation in 1900, we would be talking about corruption, huge concentration

  • of income and wealth, the robber barons who ran America-- urban squalor, and you might've

  • said to me, "Well, it's hopeless, isn't it?"

  • And I would've said that to you, "Well, there's going to be a tipping point. I can't tell

  • you exactly when it's going to happen." But what happened in 1901 was the birth of a progressive

  • movement in this country where we had a progressive, graduated income tax, we had laws against

  • impure food and drug, we had antitrust laws to break up the trusts.

  • We had a progressive movement that ended the corruption in many, many of these states and

  • many of these cities. We have reformers coming in and basically beginning to change America

  • so that it worked for everyone. Now that's been the story of America. It happened again

  • in the '30s, it happened again in the '60s. It can and will happen again.

  • BILL MOYERS: In the meantime, we can go seeInequality

  • For All,” a film by Jake Kornbluth and Robert Reich. Rob Reich, thank you very much for

  • being with me.

  • ROBERT REICH: Thank you, Bill.

  • BILL MOYERS: Robert Reich’s optimism is a tonic. But

  • the rich don’t seem ready to take the cure. Look at this recent study, “Democracy and

  • the Policy Preferences of Wealthy Americans." According to the report there is little or

  • no support among the rich for reform that would reduce income inequality. Yet according

  • toForbesmagazine, the 400 richest Americans are now worth a combined two trillion

  • dollars. That, while new figures from the census bureau show that the typical middle

  • class family makes less than it did in 1989. The two Americas are growing further and further

  • apart.

  • At our website, billmoyers.com, there’s more about this and more about the documentary

  • Inequality for All,” including my conversation with the film’s director, Jacob Kornbluth.

  • JACOB KORNBLUTH: There's a lot of people who made a lot of

  • money who think this widening economic inequality is bad for them and it's bad for the economy.

  • And that's a big concept in the movie, the sense that often, it's portrayed as, you know,

  • we're taking money from the rich and we're giving it to the poor. You know, let's get

  • angry with these folks or, you know, sort of this animus that comes up in this discussion

  • of inequality. It's us versus them, depending on what side you're on.

  • And the reframing of that discussion too, wouldn't it be good for the whole economy?

  • Wouldn't it be good for this wealthy guy, Nick Hanaeur, and these other wealthy individuals

  • if they had more customers with money to buy their stuff? And Nick Hanaeur's perspective,

  • the guy in the film, his perspective is that, "Look, if my customers have more money, my

  • skill as a businessman will show through clearer. I can make more money and also my cleverness

  • as a businessman will be more evident.” So it-- we went to the folks who believe that

  • message. And who are wealthy as well. And thank goodness, there are some, or else there

  • would be no film today.

  • BILL MOYERS: You can see my complete interview with Jacob

  • Kornbluth at BillMoyers.com. I’ll see you there, and I’ll see you here, next time.

BILL MOYERS: This week on Moyers & Company

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