Posted on 09/05/2017 6:00:27 PM PDT by Kaslin
On his radio show Tuesday, conservative host Chris Plante suggested it was par for the course that the undercovered good news about the economy would show up on page A-19 of The Washington Post. That's where Post economics columnist Robert Samuelson wrote on Monday about "the quiet comeback of the middle class," based on a poll finding more Americans are telling pollsters that they’ve made it into the middle class.
Gallup gives its respondents five choices for their economic standing: upper class, upper middle, middle, working class, and lower class. In 2006, before the recession, 60 percent of Americans identified themselves as either middle or upper-middle class, while 38 percent picked working-class or lower-class.
This changed after the Wall Street failures and bailouts at the end of 2008. As late as 2015, the country was almost evenly split between those saying they belonged in the middle and upper-middle classes (51 percent) and those placing themselves in the working and lower classes (48 percent).
But Samuelson reported "In its latest poll on class identity, done in June, Gallup found that 62 percent put themselves in the broadly defined middle class, while only 36 percent classified themselves as working class or lower class. The shifts, said Gallup, began in 2016 and demonstrated 'that subjective social class identification has stabilized close to the prevailing pattern observed before 2009.'"
Samuelson said Gallup was not along in measuring optimism:
Jobs are more plentiful. A Gallup poll in August found that 59 percent of respondents thought it was a good time to find a quality job. In 2009 and 2010, this rating hovered around a meager 10 percent.
More people feel theyre getting ahead. In July, 42 percent of respondents to a Fox News poll reported personal gains, up from only 23 percent in 2008 and beating the previous peak of 41 percent.
Most workers do not believe their jobs will be outsourced abroad, contrary to much commentary. A Gallup poll this year reported that nine of 10 workers feel unthreatened by outsourcing....
The University of Michigan Survey of Consumers reports that half of households say their finances had recently improved, the best reading since 2000, notes director Richard Curtin.
Samuelson then suggested the good news didn't translate into Trump popularity:
Heres how a CBS News Poll assessed the effect on Trump in a recent release: President Donald Trumps approval rating is unchanged from June and remains at 36 percent, while favorable views of the U.S. economy continue to soar to heights not seen in more than 15 years.... Americans say theyre evaluating him more on culture and values than on how theyre faring financially.
CBS reported on August 8 that 69 percent described the economy as good, compared to only 20 percent as bad. CBS This Morning briefly discussed it, but CBS Evening News skipped that result.
Three days later, anchor Anthony Mason reported instead this useless poll result on the solar eclipse: A CBS News poll finds 68 percent of Americans are excited about it, or at least interested. For what it's worth, that includes 61 percent of Republicans and 71 percent of Democrats. That`s a ten percent excitement gap.
Middle class is coming back? When did I miss that train? Last time I check Illegals and criminals still rule the roost. And thats who congressional Republicans and perhaps Trump wants it.
Says the #Never Trumper
From my point of view, I’ve lived in and been surrounded by the “middle class” my entire life. In my current situation, I wonder how this is being kept a secret, as it seems like a hopeless anachronism vis a vis the general media buzz. I decline to give further details.
With no wall and Obamacare.. it’s looking that way. I’m middle class.. I have Healthcare bills piling up.
Maybe the middle class with govt jobs and insurance. I think there are more jobs for lower class.. which I am happy for, but I just get more bills and poorer healthcare as punishment for working.
This is what I'm seeing, too. I don't know one middle class person around me who is having an easy time of it right now. Everyone continues to struggle. The young people I know who are getting out of college are often lucky to make what I made getting out of college in the 1990's, but they don't get health care. Wages have been flat or declining for 20 years, while the cost of almost everything has increased.
So that makes two of us. Another unicorns fart article.
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