As another school year begins, college students across the nation will invest in their educations and apply for student loans. Recent numbers put total U.S. student debt at an all-time high of more than $1.5 trillion, debt that has more than doubled in the last decade and now surpasses credit card debt. But unlike credit card debt, student loan debt is nearly impossible to discharge in bankruptcy. Instead of taking action to address this growing crisis, the Trump administration has undermined student borrower protections at every turn.
Corporate profits have grown substantially faster than employee compensation in recent decades. While the two measures tracked closely for most of the 20th century, workers have shared less of the gains more recently. Since 2000, employee compensation has increased 28 percent after inflation and corporate profits have increased 107 percent. Compounding this problem for many families, the gap between top earners and the average worker at corporations has also grown. In 1965, a CEO at one of the largest 350 companies in America made 20 times as much as the average worker in their industry. Today CEOs at the largest 350 firms average 312 times more, earning an average of nearly $19 million last year.
Aug 16 2018
Tackling Homelessness in America
Last year, the United States reported the first increase in homelessness in seven years. More than 550,000 people were estimated to be homeless on a single night, including more than 40,000 veterans and over 40,000 young people.
Aug 13 2018
Real Average Hourly Wages Declined in July
The average hourly wage for production and nonsupervisory workers—our best measure of the median workers’ take home pay—was lower in July 2018 than it was in July 2017, after adjusting for inflation. This is the third straight month of year-to-year declines in real wages. Seven months since the Republican tax law took effect, it’s not clear how much longer American workers are supposed to wait before they see the raises President Trump promised them.
New rules from the Trump administration are expected to allow states to weaken protections that prevent insurers from discriminating based on pre-existing conditions. This would potentially expose half of nonelderly Americans, 133 million in total, to denial of coverage or unaffordable premiums because of pre-existing conditions. This would affect Americans of all ages, including 17 million children, although it would disproportionately impact older Americans, who often suffer from more chronic health issues.
This week, House Republicans plan to reveal their Tax Cut 2.0 plan. It is widely expected that the plan will make the temporary provisions of the new tax law permanent, including the 20 percent deduction on qualifying pass-through income. The benefits of the deduction flow mostly to the wealthiest Americans, such as those that own large hedge funds, law firms, and real estate companies. While just 2 percent of the benefits in 2018 will go to households earning under $50,000 a year, 44 percent will go to households earning more than $1 million.
Americans living in remote, rural, and tribal communities tend to have less access to high-speed broadband than their urban counterparts. Today, more than 23 million rural residents lack access to broadband, which prevents them from tapping into better medical care, online education, job training, and other services that fuel local economic growth. In all, broadband internet accounts for more than $30 billion in annual consumer benefits.
In the wake of the Republican tax cuts, taxes on corporate profits are at historic lows. Congressional Republicans and the Trump administration promised that this historic tax cut would lead to large wage gains for working families. In June, though, the average hourly wage was unchanged from a year prior, after adjusting for inflation. For production and nonsupervisory workers (a good proxy for the median worker), wages were actually lower in June than a year prior. Meanwhile, U.S. public companies announced $437 billion in share buybacks in the second quarter, shattering the record they set in the first quarter.
In the January edition of Consumer Corner, we detailed Republican efforts to undermine the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the sole watchdog in financial markets for American consumers. Since then, Mick Mulvaney, the bureau’s interim director, has doubled down on these efforts, accelerating changes that weaken critical consumer protections and lighten oversight of banks and other financial institutions.
Jul 09 2018
People Who Did Not Qualify for Premium Tax Credits Dropped Coverage as Health Premiums Spiked
The consequences of Republicans’ sabotage of the Affordable Care Act marketplaces continue to pile up. In just the latest example, about 1 million Americans were priced out of the individual health insurance market last year. Average monthly enrollment among people who did not receive advance premium tax credit (APTC) subsidies fell by 20 percent between 2016 and 2017, just as average monthly premiums increased by 21 percent. By contrast, individual plan enrollment among individuals who qualified for APTC subsidies fell by 3 percent. While the administration concludes that the spike in premiums drove people out of the market, President Trump and congressional Republicans are doubling down on efforts to further destabilize markets, raise premiums, and eliminate coverage for millions of Americans.