14.10.2015 Views

ARCHITECTURE

The_Art_of_Inequality

The_Art_of_Inequality

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

filtered through an economic sieve; doing so presupposes<br />

the “economy” as an isolated phenomenon that takes precedence<br />

over all else.<br />

1.2.3 Historicizing Data<br />

Closer to the current policy-makers themselves,<br />

underlining this focus in its 2015 Annual Report, the Executive<br />

Office of the President’s Council of Economic<br />

Advisors (CEA) highlights income inequality as a fundamental<br />

analytic required to understand and promote what<br />

the Obama Administration has called “middle-class economics.”<br />

14 The Economic Report of the President, intended<br />

primarily for a Congressional audience, is released annually<br />

by the CEA in order to explain, contextualize, and<br />

justify the Administration’s domestic and international<br />

priorities for fiscal policy. In 2015, alongside productivity<br />

and participation, according to the CEA, inequality is a<br />

force to be reckoned with for those in charge of managing<br />

the United States of America’s “well-being.” 15<br />

In this, their mandated frame of mind, the CEA<br />

has characterized “A Brief History of Middle-Class Incomes<br />

in the Postwar Period” as fitting neatly into the following<br />

stages: “The Age of Shared Growth (1948–1973),”<br />

“The Age of Expanded Participation (1973–1995),” and<br />

“The Age of Productivity Recovery (1995–2013).” 16 Representative<br />

of dominant narratives on inequality today in<br />

both its content and its structure (where a “brief history”<br />

of four pages ostensibly provides sufficient context for a<br />

414-page manual of contemporary policy assessments and<br />

proposals), a very particular story emerges in the CEA report—one<br />

that has been told and retold in different forms.<br />

Upon further inspection, however, its limiting assumptions<br />

are revealed.<br />

1.2.3.1 “The Age of Shared Growth (1948–1973)”<br />

The report’s periodization picks up in 1948, just<br />

two years after the CEA was founded as part of the Employment<br />

Act of 1946. This was precisely the time when<br />

the idea of “the economy” was beginning to be discussed<br />

at all as an object of analysis in its own right. 17 [See HH:<br />

1933] This is an unlikely coincidence, since, as the CEA<br />

indicates, the newly networked field of technology, materials,<br />

and presumptively shared understandings of the<br />

middle-class road ahead facilitated a veritable explosion<br />

of growth for the U.S. economy immediately after the war.<br />

In response to unprecedented rates of urbanization,<br />

and framed by a perceived communist threat abroad,<br />

the federal government crafted a series of policies meant<br />

not only to manage but also to distribute this growth—both<br />

spatially and financially—among the members of the aspirational<br />

middle class. 18 Though the 1956 Interstate Highway<br />

Act is the most well known, the U.S. Housing Act of<br />

1949 was perhaps the most comprehensive and far-reaching<br />

of these efforts. Principally known for its emphasis<br />

on the reform of urban housing conditions through slum<br />

clearance and urban renewal programs, the act also drastically<br />

increased the federal backing of mortgage insurance,<br />

ramping up the government’s long-standing policy<br />

of homeownership promotion above other types of housing<br />

tenure [See HH: 1944, 1949, 1952, 1962, 1973, 2009]. 19<br />

By most economic measures (although importantly not by<br />

others) income inequality was soon at an all-time low. 20 In<br />

the 1950s and 1960s, Americans’ average annual incomes<br />

increased. However it was the lowest-earning fifth of families<br />

that experienced the highest average increases, while<br />

the top 5 percent experienced the lowest. 21 The homeownership<br />

rate, accordingly, increased from 44 percent in<br />

1940 to 55 percent in 1950 and 62 percent in 1960. 22 Due<br />

in part to this expansion of access to homeownership, the<br />

share of total wealth held by the least wealthy 90 percent<br />

of the population increased from 22 percent in 1940 to 32<br />

percent in 1976. 23<br />

44 45

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!