A Graph Demonstrating the Difference in Wage Earnings Increases Since 1980 as the US Economy has Grown. Adjusted for Inflation, the Lowest Quintile's Earnings have Remained Stagnant.
The US economy is geared towards benefiting the top 1% of US earners, while the bottom 99% struggle to pick up the scraps. This is popularly known as trickle-down economics, or Reaganomics.
Whether a Democrat or a Republican is in control of the country and its policy-making, this trickle-down motif is in effect. And it has been in effect since the early 80's when Reagan began to roll-back Roosevelt's "New Deal" policies which had successfully taken the US out of the Great Depression and into relatively uniform prosperity (both the poor and the rich benefited from the "New Deal"). The modern difference between the two major US political parties in regards to economic benefit is minor, but significant. To mention them in brief:
Democrats tend to subsidize high-tech industry and other corporations via domestic social improvement programs, spending on education, and government contracts for building up the infrastructure of the nation. These efforts are of course expensive and recent Democratic leaders (Clinton, essentially) have elected to attempt to balance the budget and pay off the national debt, and therefore they pay for these subsidies with higher taxes in general. The higher taxes are especially weighty for the wealthy, since they benefit the most from these efforts.
Republicans, on the other hand, subsidize high-tech industry and other corporations through a combination of military spending and tax cuts. Military spending is just as expensive to maintain as any domestic social program, but its much simpler to justify for a politician. First: your average US citizen isn't going to notice what impact, if any, military spending has on national defense-- all he'll know is that the US needs a national defense to protect him from the "others", be they Commies, terrorists, immigrants, or any other boogie-men he doesn't want to see in his neighborhood. Meanwhile, the US military can be deployed to make sure natural resources are secured and business interests are satisfied in foreign markets. Second: its harder to muster an argument against increased military spending-- even unnecessary increased military spending-- if that spending isn't having any immediate affect on your pocketbook. Hence, lower taxes and let the other party be the "bad guys" as they try to balance the budget and pay off the national debt while spending tax dollars on "frivolous" social programs that make sure homeless children don't die from starvation, etc.
So those are the key differences, really. The end result in regards to the defacto corporate welfare program is the same, but the long- and short-term impact on the citizenry is different enough to be worthy of some attention.
This, in a nutshell, is how the US economy became and remains an international juggernaut. Good or bad, it is the not-so-secret secret to our success.
Unlike when the "New Deal" economic policies were meaningfully applied, these days when the US economy does well, US citizens on the whole don't really notice any benefit. The highest quintile of US earners can expect to be rewarded a bit for any boom in the economy, but the top 1% are the real beneficiaries of this economic system. This is where things get interesting for me. There's no real trickle-down, so to speak.
Income mobility decreases, the rich get richer, the poor stay poor, and somehow the US economy is worthy of celebrating-- we should all go out and buy new luxury vehicles 'cause we're, like, days away from that trickle-down income feeding our bank accounts!
Except, not really.
I'm not sure I have any concrete solution to this inequality. I'm not even sure it's a problem when thinking of it in terms of "the big picture." It cannot be doubted that the US of today is the most dominant and wealthy superpower the world has ever seen.
However, I do feel significant guilt and even some anger for how little that wealth is being redistributed. I'm, frankly, baffled by how easily big business has prevented employees from demanding larger wages more representative of the value of their work. Unions, minimum wage laws, etc, exist and are there to prevent poor working men/women from living in complete poverty (for the most part), but its remarkable how ineffectual they are. Unions are constantly haggling for better pay and benefits and overtime/holiday pay and safe working conditions; and yet they haven't managed to raise the wages of the lowest quintile at all since the late 1970's (adjusted for inflation). Meanwhile top CEOs and hedge-fund managers write themselves annual checks in excess of a quarter of a billion dollars (last year one hedge-fund manager took home a paycheck for 1.7 billion dollars). That's simply astonishing.
Link to the article that got me thinking about this.