The only way to boost the American economy is to put more money into
the hands of the rich, right? Wall Street firms did not disappoint the
greedy hands of high-end suppliers such as Ferrari and Swiss watches
when they passed out $26.7 billion dollars in bonuses for 2013, which is
up a hefty 15% from last year.
Luxury product sales will no doubt increase from those bonuses. The rich get richer while the poor get poorer. That much money could have fed countless starving families across the country. It could’ve provided homeless people shelter for these remaining chilly weeks.
But no, the only logical way to boost the economy
is to give big bonuses to people who already have busting bank accounts
so they will invest their millions back in, right? Wrong. If this money
had been placed in the hands of minimum wage workers, that cash would
have spread throughout the economy because these people are using almost
every dollar they earn to pay for their basic needs.
Author Sarah Anderson
states, “According to my new report, every extra dollar going into the
pockets of low-wage workers adds about $1.21 to the national economy.
Every extra dollar a high-income American makes, by contrast, only adds
about 39 cents to the gross domestic product (GDP)”.
Anderson brings up a great point because not only are the rich
getting richer, but also they are doing so at the expense of the entire
country’s economic growth. Had these bonuses been placed in the pockets of low-wage workers, the growth of the economy would’ve remarkably increased by about $32.3 billion.
“There was just this kind of cult of more, more, more; grow, grow grow,
and I think now the culture on Wall Street is fundamentally unhealthy.”
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