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A Strong Middle Class Is Good for Economic Growth
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A Strong Middle Class Is Good for Economic Growth

A weakened middle class doesn’t just hurt those who are losing ground. It hurts all of us by stifling our country’s economic growth.

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The speech President Barack Obama delivered Tuesday on the state of the middle class was a forceful refutation of the failures of supply-side economics. Most promisingly, it reached for an alternative theory of economic growth based on the role of the middle class.

The president is certainly on to something. A weakened middle class doesn’t just hurt those who are losing ground. It hurts all of us by stifling our country’s economic growth, as the Center for American Progress has argued in a number of places.

Consider that from 1947 to 1979, when the middle class received 54 percent of the nation’s total income on average, the economy grew at a steady clip of 3.7 percent per year. That was 1 percentage point higher than the 2.7 percent rate it grew at from 1980 to 2010, when the middle class was weakening to its current share of only 46 percent.

A 1 percentage-point difference in annual growth rates is a big deal: Over 30 years, an economy increasing at 2.7 percent annually will grow to about two-and-a-quarter times its original size. One growing at 3.7 percent annually will more than triple.

Further, New York University economist William Easterly’s research on international economic development finds that “relatively homogenous middle-class societies have more income and growth.”

While the president didn’t fully develop the argument for why a strong middle class is good for economic growth, he did articulate some key connections. CAP’s David Madland expands on those and offers some others.

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