Cross-posted at Reports from the Economic Front.
Politicians always seem to be talking about the middle class. They need some new focus groups. According to the Pew Research Center, over the past four years the percentage of adult Americans that say they are in the lower class has risen significantly, from a quarter to almost one-third (see chart below).
Pew also found that the demographic profile of the self-defined lower class has also changed. Young people, according to Pew, “are disproportionately swelling the ranks of the self-defined lower classes.” More specifically some 40% of those between 18 to 29 years of age now identify as being in the lower classs compared to only 25% in 2008.
Strikingly, the percentage of whites and blacks that see themselves in the lower class is now basically equal. The percentage of whites who consider themselves in the lower class rose from less than a quarter in 2008 to 31% in 2012. This brought them in line with blacks, whose percentage remained at a third. The percentage of Latinos describing themselves as lower class rose to 40%, a ten percentage point increase from 2008.
And not surprisingly, as the chart below shows, many who self-identify as being in the lower class are experiencing great hardships. In fact, 1 in 3 faced four or all five of the problems addressed in the survey.
In short, there is a lot of hurting in our economy.
Comments 6
ansaheli — September 17, 2012
It's kind of obvious that this is because of the worsening economy and
the increasing income gap, but is it plausible some of this change can
be chalked up to people coming to class consciousness and realizing they
aren't and never were middle class? After all, being middle class is a
great status symbol and its definition is so blurry that a lot of lower
and upper class people consider themselves "middle class".
The Continuing Relevance of Class » Sociological Images « National-Express2011 — September 17, 2012
[...] on thesocietypages.org Sharen mit:TwitterFacebookTumblrPinterestEmailMoreLinkedInLike this:LikeBe the first to like [...]
[research] The Continuing Relevance of Class « slendermeans — November 1, 2012
[...] [sociologicalimages] [...]
quick hit: The Continuing Relevance of Class | feimineach — December 30, 2013
[…] [sociologicalimages] […]
The Continuing Relevance of Class — March 28, 2014
[…] [sociologicalimages] […]