What has not been analyzed, however, is exactly who is falling under the respective banners of the 99% and the 1%. Assumptions are that the larger number includes the workforce, the economically downtrodden, and basically anyone categorized as less-than-affluent. In contrast, the miniscule number is thought to be the dominion of the hyper-elites. There is an inevitable blurring of those lines, however, smudged further by the arrival of support from those who often are regarded as being among
This itself is not problematic, but it does breed confusion. For instance, can Kanye West really align himself with the 99% while wearing $3,000 jeans? One of the biggest advocates of these rallies has been Russell Simmons, best-selling author of “Super Rich: A Guide To Having It All”. How is his message interpreted by those railing against banks, when he is the credit line force behind The Rush Card?
Distancing from those celebrity optics, we finally have a news source digging into the statistics, and the numbers are, in fact, not only surprising but sobering. CNN Money has looked into the financials, and what they reveal is that the upper 1% is not strictly the realm of the pampered palatial-dwelling aesthetes and G6-riding moguls. In fact, a relatively small number of these financial titans actually occupy addresses or offices in or around Wall Street. Most surprising, however, is what actually constitutes that arena described as “The Top 1%”. According to federal tax figures the amounts may be surprisingly lower than most expect:
Collectively, their adjusted gross income was $1.3 trillion. And while $343,927 was the minimum AGI to be included, on average, Top 1-percenters made $960,000.But the income threshold for this exclusive group changes every year, largely with the performance of the stock market, experts said.
Notably, that gross income is woefully shy of the annual debt figure this nation is currently incurring. And I am
Furthermore, when taking a look at the richest Americans, you note two things about this crowd. First, the list is not choked by those from the financial sector who typify Wall Street avarice. Second, a great deal of those situated at the top come not from entrenched corporate titans, but from relatively new, first or second generation or self-made executives, springing up in just the past few decades. While there are the expected accursed financial giants – Warren Buffet, the Koch brothers, and George Soros – much of the Forbes Top-20 consists of entrepreneurs making their wealth away from Wall Street.
The list of names, while familiar, shows many who have risen to the top with new ideas and unexpected success. You see not only Bill Gates (Microsoft) but Larry Ellison (Oracle), Christie, Jim, and Alice Walton (Wal-Mart), Jeff Bezos (Amazon), Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook), Sergey Brin and
So, does the CNN report undermine or discredit the OWS movement? Of course not. However, it does something that has been in starkly short supply these past few weeks, and that is bringing into focus the actuals behind the touted metrics. It also suggests that the focus of ire may be misdirected on some level. Wall Street may be part of the problem, but just how big of a part seems less obvious.
Brad Slager is a freelance writer who has covered the film industry for years, including the Sundance Film Festival. He is currently a columnist for CHUD.com where he cover marketing behind new film releases.