The middle class, long the bastion of the American Dream, is losing ground — and the housing market is taking notice.
The middle class saw a reduction in the vast majority of U.S. metro areas from 2000 to 2014, according to the Pew Research Center. Former members of the middle class either filtered into the upper or lower class, accentuating the divide between the two.
But what exactly is meant by the mercurial term “middle class”? The report defines middle class as households in the range of two-thirds the median income to double the median income. This of course varies by state. In California, a middle class household typically earns between $44,700 and $135,500, according to data from the U.S. Census. The exact dollar figure varies by metro area. Note that “class” in this context is used purely to denote income level and has no other socioeconomic qualifiers attached to it.
This vanishing of the middle class and corresponding swell in the lower and upper income classes is reflective of a broader economic issue: income inequality.
California’s growing income gap
Pew researchers contend areas with large tech industries have higher upper class populations. In California, look no further than the glittering Silicon Valley and the Bay area. Alternatively, a greater number of lower income populations are most often found in agricultural communities, as exist in the Central Valley.
California is home to both large upper class and lower class communities. For instance, about 20% of the population nationwide is classified as being in the upper class income strata. In California, the upper class is most numerous in and around the Bay Area, including:
- 31% of households in San Jose-Santa Clara; and
- 28% of households in San Francisco.
At the same time, about 29% of the population nationwide is classified as being in the lower class income strata. In California, members of the lower class are most numerous in far inland communities, including:
- 46% in Visalia-Porterville;
- 43% in Fresno; and
- 43% in Merced.
The widening rift
The divide between upper and lower income classes is widening with each passing year. In California, 50.1% of the population was considered middle class in 2000. In 2014, 47.8% were middle class, a loss of 2.3%, or about 900,000 people.
The difference is split between households growing their income and matriculating into the upper class — and households who have lost income and have descended into the lower income category.
This distribution has played out differently in California’s largest cities, with fewer middle class households everywhere you look. The metro areas with the biggest losses in middle class households from 2000 to 2014 were:
- Sacramento, with a 6.1% loss, most of which filtered to the lower class;
- Napa, with a 5.2% loss, most filtering to the upper class;
- San Francisco, with a 5% loss, most filtering to the upper class;
- Santa Rosa, with a 4.8% loss, with households filtering equally between lower and upper class; and
- Modesto, with a 4.7% loss, most filtering to the lower class.
Clearly, a smaller middle class means different things for each locale.
Areas with growing upper classes are seeing a surge in home prices and a growing economy. At the same time, home inventory shortages are worse in these areas of the state experiencing rapid growth.
Places where the lower class is growing are experiencing slower economic growth, and some places are even stuck in the lingering recession that most of the state has already recovered from. Housing markets in these areas are still moving along, but turnover is down and home sales volume is weak.
Housing in areas with a growing lower class
Areas in California with a growing lower income class are prone to a few issues that hinder the housing market. These include:
- less income to support saving for a down payment, needed to become a homeowner;
- lower homeownership rates;
- a focus in low-tier home sales, despite a lack of inventory in this price tier;
- fewer home sales as inventory is extremely limited in the tier where most potential homebuyers are located; and
- a vicious cycle of less participation in the economy, which holds down wages and further contributes to the problem of income inequality.
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Housing in areas with a growing upper class
Areas with a growing upper income class also have experienced issues with their housing markets. For examples, look no further than San Jose and San Francisco, which have seen their upper classes grow:
- in San Francisco, from 24% in 2000 to 28% in 2014; and
- in San Jose, from 28% in 2000 to 31% in 2014.
These metros are poster children of what happens when a rapidly gentrifying population outpaces and overtakes their local housing markets.
Here, economic growth fueled by the tech industry created massive wealth for the residents. But these same residents are constrained by restrictive zoning and land use ordinances, which prevent new construction. This has caused residential construction to lag far behind population growth, pushing up the price of existing homes catastrophically.
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The result is an unbalanced region of the state, where teachers and service employees cannot afford to live where they work. Fewer home sales occur and real estate professionals rely on a shrinking number of high-priced transactions to make a living each year.
The solution is within reach
To find the solution to reenergizing the middle class, you need to first look to the cause of the problem.
The causes are many, and most fall within recent changes to the tax code.
The aim of the U.S. tax system is to equitably shift wealth around to fund the foundations of our society. These structures include schools, law enforcement, infrastructure, the judicial system, health services, the military… and so many other necessities.
Everyone with a job pays taxes, but most of these taxes come from a select few who earn their money passively, through the assets they hold — the rentier class. Some call this class of people “the 1%,” a term which entered the public lexicon during the Occupy Wall Street movement. The tax code is meant to shift wealth from the rentier class to these foundational structures in order to maintain a stable and functioning society.
For the purposes of understanding why the middle class has shrunk in recent years, consider this — the U.S. tax code has changed significantly in recent decades.
Following World War II, the ceiling for the top tax bracket was 94% — a limit set to reduce the national debt which ballooned following the Great Depression and curative New Deal.
By 1982, the ceiling was down to 50%. In 2016, the top tax bracket was 39.6%. At the time of this writing, the current tax proposal lowers taxes further on the wealthy.
Those who advocate for lower taxes on the wealthy may point to some notion of trickle down economic theory, which posits that when wealthy individuals are able to keep more of their money, they will spend it. By spending the money, these wealthy individuals therefore become drivers of the economy, spreading their wealth to the masses.
But the problem is, this generally doesn’t happen. In real life, wealthy recipients of tax breaks tend to hold on to their money, building their nest eggs and keeping their money out of direct circulation in the markets.
In the meantime, the rest of the population is relegated to relying on substandard government services in order to stay afloat, which reduces everyone’s quality of life.
The solution to the dwindling middle class —requiring the wealthy to pay more taxes — is right in front of us, but no one is likely to take any action. Instead, our current course is set to widen the rift further between lower and upper classes.
Hey David Campbell, Joseph Slogatz, Martin, jThomas and other “experts” about America’s Tax structure and its brackets.
We agree both California and the US Government spend other people’s money like bloated dictators with no care for tomorrow.
Our liberal/conservative dichotomy stinks––two sides of the same counterfeit coin.
The 1% sit on their money more than you are aware. Educate yourselves. Here’s some sources for you.
Where are yours? These are all compiled over the last 4 or 5 years:
https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/10/elite-wealth-management/410842/
http://www.businessinsider.com/r-what-if-the-caution-of-the-super-rich-ebbs-2014-11
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/07/rich-americans-hoarding-cash_n_3720941.html
https://blog.ted.com/6-studies-of-money-and-the-mind/
http://evonomics.com/they-dont-just-hide-their-money-economist-says-billionaire-wealth/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-is-congress-a-millionaires-club/
https://inequality.org/research/selfmade-myth-hallucinating-rich/
You got proof to the contrary or a source credibly stating otherwise?
The latest occupant of our White House went to Washington on a lie with a smart-ass soundbite, “drain the swamp” and instead pissed it into a cesspool stocked with lying swindlers, and kleptomaniacs happy to sell out American citizens for yet another buck.
Has little to do with the misleading labels: liberal/conservative.
Has everything to do with the bad character of criminally inclined politicians to grab more money and more influence from both sides of the aisle while spending other people’s money…. nothing new there.
These facts may run counter to your penchant to criticize First Tuesday by name-calling them “Marxist,” but it’s evident you needed a scapegoat after listening to too much radio talk show.
FT’s editorials demonstrate they are written by clear-eyed reasonable people who have been around, know the long-term trends, and understand the underlying economic mechanics. FT is merely the messenger whom you want to shoot.
The truth is Liberal scum and Conservative scum are merely two varieties found in Trump’s Cesspool Pond. Congress increasingly attracts rich attorneys under the cover of seemingly standing for good, but only as long as they get more money, get their Congressional free health-care, and get profitable influence for themselves and their palm-greasing pals.
Some “readers,” uneducated yet very opinionated, log into FT, then get haughty and indignant to find their pet belief is not supported. The belief that the real estate industry runs without politics is a child’s myth.
That’s both hilarious and pathetic…!
I have not read one….not even one comment from a complaining reader who analyzes the economy and proposes a solution, like FT does constantly.
Instead, carping readers without substance to speak but only complain, are always tsk-tsking FT’s editorials.
One person said, “…Taxing the crap out of the wealthy is a form of ‘eating your seed grain.'” A short-sighted complaint. In fact, while we agree governments tax too much, what they do with that money is vital to the nation. The taxing authority is only eating seed grain where they fail to create value in infrastructure, defense, health, and nurture.
Government notoriously fails in this manner. THAT’s where more than half politician’s focus should be but isn’t.
For the record, there is no such thing as a “neutral education venue.” If you think there is, go start one yourself. Nobody will read it because it will be as empty as a Dick & Jane reader and we already have a Jane and a Dick in the White House.
Great comments on a foolish opinion piece. This is why I no longer use First Tuesday for my continuing education. I don’t want them to “sit on the money”. HA HA HA.
I’m just surprised with the political twist the story has. More taxes for a bigger spend crazy government, really?? WTF I thought this was a neutral education venue.
Please explain to me how increasing the top tax rate would build the middle class? You want to wash money through the government and somehow that is going to improve the lives of other individuals? Please site your source that individuals in the upper income bracket ‘sit’ on their money. These individuals are not stupid. To ‘sit’ on their money would be extremely foolish as inflation outpaces the interest they would receive by sitting on it. The truth is these individuals invest the money which allows companies to expand or new ventures are created. This actually creates jobs. You have far too much faith in government. Even if these individuals ‘sat’ on their money, what do you think the banks do with this money? Just leave it sitting there in a bank vault? No, you know very well they lend this money out in all sorts of ways that create jobs. Let’s start by addressing the problem…..government. Eliminate the wasteful spending in California so you can lower EVERYONE’s taxes. Yes everyone’s. Vote out of office politicians that propose horrible tax increases such as the 12 cent increase gas tax per gallon that recently went into effect. We already have a significant excise tax on gas that is supposed to be paying for our road repairs and such. Being that I’ve been priced out of the SF real estate market already due to horrible governmental policy, I now have to travel a distance to work in SF and am forced to eat this excise tax increase. Yes, I am being pushed out of the middle class as well because of bad policy. You can also expect the price of goods to increase as a result of this gas tax increase as it now costs manufacturers and farmers more to distribute their product to market. I have noticed your organization has become extremely political. You should stick with what you know…..overcharging individuals to become an exclusive member of your club. My days of being a proud Californian are dwindling. This state is on the precipice of collapse I’m afraid.
Yes I agree We must drain the swamp. California has become inflated with taxes. My property tax went up by 300.00 this year. In addition to so many other taxes that we’re imposed this year. I see so many siingle moms with children lacking housing. They work but their income is not enough to support themselves especially rent which has skyrocketed. Something has to change. Yes don’t have the answer. But you were very good at expressing your thoughts thanks
Thank you for this article! It varifies something I have suspected for some time about First Tuesday. The “solutions” in this article are Marxism 101. What amazes me is that there are so many intelligent, educated and capable people that still believe in Marxist principles. How many time does Marxism have to fail before people will reject it? Taxing the crap out of the wealthy does not make a healthy economy or society; it impoverishes it in the long run. Taxing the crap out of the wealthy is a form of “eating your seed grain”. It seems to work out great until there is no longer enough seed to plant the next crop. And then we all starve.
Wow great response
Does the leftist dribble ever stop? Apparently it has infected the realtor education field too. Sorry I ever signed up for the course. The text book was filled with lies and propaganda.
The solution is based on a false premise. Governments, if anything cause income disparity by favoring certain groups over others. Applying tax solutions is like curing cancer with bandaids
WAYNe, I agree with you. But it’s more like curing cancer with cigarettes. Allowing our Government to spend more of someone else’s money isn’t just ineffective, it’s the problem!
I don’t buy my courses from First Tuesday to support a political agenda. They should stick to Real Estate Education!! I doubt they’ve written Jerry Brown and volunteered to pay an increase of their own taxes……and if they have, I want my student fees back !! Or, should I say “redistributed”?!
When rich people keep their money they generally don’t just put it under a mattress. Their money is invested in stocks, which keep companies working and jobs continuing along, or they may invest in bonds that are needed to finance a whole variety of things that usually generate some sort of jobs, or they may save it in a bank so the bank can loan it out to someone who wants to buy a home or car or whatever. Invested money helps the economy. These people that cling to the “trickle down” campaign, yes campaign not economic theory, need to take economics 101 and broaden their thought prosses beyond their present limit.
I dove into the article thinking I was getting some good info. Didn’t know it would be s political add for income redistribution…