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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMillionaires run our government. Here’s why that matters.
. . .
The economic gulf between ordinary Americans and the people who represent them in the halls of power raises serious questions about our democratic process. Should we care that so many politicians are drawn from the top economic strata and so few come from the working class? Do lawmakers from different classes actually behave differently in office? In my new book, White-Collar Government: The Hidden Role of Class in Economic Policy Making, I explore how the virtual absence of an entire class of people from our political institutions affects economic policy.
Political observers in the United States have always worried about the effects of government by the rich. During the Founding, Anti-Federalists warned that the Constitution would create a government of wealthy merchants that would consist . . . of men who will have no congenial feelings with the people, but a perfect indifference for, and contempt of them. Federalists such as Alexander Hamilton countered that although the Constitution might produce a white-collar government, the effects would be small because different classes of Americans would have the same basic views about economic policy. We all want growth, so whats the harm in letting the upper class call the shots?
White-Collar Government is the first book to bring hard evidence to bear on this long-standing debate. In it, Ive compiled every available source of data on how legislators from different occupational or social-class backgrounds think and behave in office.
What I found is squarely at odds with the rosy notion that class doesnt matter in our political institutions. Pollsters have known for decades that Americans from different classes have different views about economic issues, that working-class Americans tend to be more progressive and that the wealthy tend to want government to play a smaller role in economic affairs. White-Collar Government shows that politicians are no exception.
. . .
The economic gulf between ordinary Americans and the people who represent them in the halls of power raises serious questions about our democratic process. Should we care that so many politicians are drawn from the top economic strata and so few come from the working class? Do lawmakers from different classes actually behave differently in office? In my new book, White-Collar Government: The Hidden Role of Class in Economic Policy Making, I explore how the virtual absence of an entire class of people from our political institutions affects economic policy.
Political observers in the United States have always worried about the effects of government by the rich. During the Founding, Anti-Federalists warned that the Constitution would create a government of wealthy merchants that would consist . . . of men who will have no congenial feelings with the people, but a perfect indifference for, and contempt of them. Federalists such as Alexander Hamilton countered that although the Constitution might produce a white-collar government, the effects would be small because different classes of Americans would have the same basic views about economic policy. We all want growth, so whats the harm in letting the upper class call the shots?
White-Collar Government is the first book to bring hard evidence to bear on this long-standing debate. In it, Ive compiled every available source of data on how legislators from different occupational or social-class backgrounds think and behave in office.
What I found is squarely at odds with the rosy notion that class doesnt matter in our political institutions. Pollsters have known for decades that Americans from different classes have different views about economic issues, that working-class Americans tend to be more progressive and that the wealthy tend to want government to play a smaller role in economic affairs. White-Collar Government shows that politicians are no exception.
. . .
THE REST:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/01/07/millionaires-run-our-government-heres-why-that-matters/
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Millionaires run our government. Here’s why that matters. (Original Post)
Triana
Jan 2014
OP
democratisphere
(17,235 posts)1. Government of the rich, by the rich and for the rich.
No wonder the middle class is vanishing.
Baitball Blogger
(46,757 posts)2. Triana,this post deserves more recognition than it's getting.
I'm afraid that Christie has engulfed the news today.
Triana
(22,666 posts)3. I agree. It ought to be on front pages of every paper....
... Instead of Christie. Ah well.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)4. Since when is "lawyer" a "not for profit" profession?
ProfessorPlum
(11,277 posts)5. The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein
Triana
(22,666 posts)6. Absolutely. n/t