An Open Letter to the One Percent

You worked hard for that money. No one can deny that. You have been rewarded for your talent, your intelligence, your risk-taking, your creativity, and your good fortune. The notion that you should change a system that has worked so well must seem downright stupid.
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Congratulations. You are the richest class of human beings in the history of the world. Collectively, you own 26 percent of this nation's wealth. Add in the next richest 5 percent of Americans, and you have more money than everyone else combined. Nowhere else in the world would you be able to earn so much and give back so little.

You worked hard for that money. No one can deny that. You have been rewarded for your talent, your intelligence, your risk-taking, your creativity, and your good fortune. The notion that you should change a system that has worked so well must seem downright stupid.

But, as the philosopher Amartya Sen reminds us, "What we can see is not independent of where we stand in relation to what we are trying to see."

From where you're standing, things must look pretty good. In the world you live in, economic growth is strong. Unemployment is brief, rare, and softened by ample savings. Health insurance is affordable. Education is among the best in the world. Food, shelter, and transportation are never hard to come by. And retirement will surely be comfortable.

It's not perfect. You may get fired. You may lose money. You may experience stress and sacrifice and sorrow. But you will not struggle to survive. You will not be denied the American Dream.

So it's only natural that you believe this path is open to everyone. But this could not be further from the truth.

In the world outside the One Percent, economic growth is sluggish -- and has been so, on average, for more than thirty years. For most Americans, in fact, it has been nonexistent. Unemployment is a common and devastating threat. Retirement is an uphill battle. Education is a crapshoot. Food, shelter, and transportation strain the budget. And until recently, health insurance was a luxury afforded to some but not nearly all.

You've read these complaints before. You've heard the voices shouting outside your office windows. You've seen the faces protesting on your television screens. But, in all likelihood, you haven't seen the world through their eyes. And that makes all the difference.

Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, taught that we cannot know what is the right thing to do until we have looked at a situation through the eyes of an "impartial spectator."

"In solitude," wrote Smith, "we are apt to feel too strongly whatever relates to ourselves... The conversation of a friend brings us to a better, that of a stranger to still a better temper. The man within the breast, the abstract and ideal spectator of our sentiments and conduct, requires often to be awakened and put in mind of his duty."

That duty is great, for you wield immense power.

A few years ago, the political scientist Larry Bartels studied the voting record of U.S. senators on issues where the rich, the middle class, and the poor disagreed. He found that the senators sided with the rich 50 percent more often than they sided with the middle class, and they always sided with the rich and the middle class over the poor.

In a sense, they're protecting their own. After all, the average legislator is six times richer than the average citizen.

They also have more reasons and more opportunities to hear what you have to say. Corporations, which you own and run, spend significantly more money lobbying and have significantly more high-level government allies than their opponents. The result is that corporations win lobbying battles far more often than unions or citizen groups.

You have an obligation to use that influence responsibly. Since the 1970s, you have failed in that duty. By tilting the playing field away from the 99 percent, you siphoned an increasing share of the nation's resources, until the country was drowning in debt, struggling to keep up, and unable to fuel the recovery it so desperately needed. Once you had climbed the ladder of success, you pulled up the ladder so no one could come up after you.

I don't believe you did so with malicious intent. After all, many of you are my friends and colleagues. Rather, I believe you were practicing what the late economist John Kenneth Galbraith called "innocent fraud."

"It is innocent," explained Galbraith, "because most who employ it are without conscious guilt. It is fraud because it is quietly in the service of special interest."

As opposed to general interest, the interest of all Americans. There is a way to become rich without impoverishing everyone else -- and we as Americans celebrate that sort of success -- but that's not what has happened in recent years.

To be clear: It is not your accumulation of wealth per se that lies at the root of our problems. It is the manner in which that wealth was accumulated: through the systematic demolition of the tax code, regulations, public spending, and labor market institutions that created the greatest prosperity the world has ever seen.

The good news is, all that wealth gives you the ability to undo the damage. You are the most powerful citizens of the most powerful country in the world. Your country needs you. You have the influence, the means, and the brainpower to turn this economy around, but you must know the facts. You must hear the cold, hard truth.

No, I'm not trying to start a class war. Quite the opposite. I'm asking you to end the class war. I'm asking you to construct an economy where everyone benefits, rather than the few at the expense of the many.

"There's class warfare, all right," said Warren Buffett in 2006, "but it's my class, the rich class, that's making war, and we're winning."

You probably don't see it that way. "War" is a strong word. But that's because it's not your standard of living that's been under near-constant attack for thirty-plus years. Your piece of the pie has been growing. Your voices have been heard. And that's why you're the ones who have to step up.

Nothing less than what Sen calls "the freedom to determine the nature of our lives" is at stake. That's something that you have and most of the 99 percent doesn't. That kind of freedom only comes with a good job with good benefits in a growing economy where good schools and a safe neighborhood in a clean environment create real opportunity. Not only is that kind of freedom at the heart of the American Dream; it's also our natural birthright as human beings. Yet it's been slipping out of reach for more and more Americans with each passing year.

Things can get worse. Let us hope they do not. Of course, it's one thing to hope; it's quite another to act. But act you must. In my new book Letter to the One Percent, I explain why. To learn more, visit www.LetterToTheOnePercent.com.

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This op-ed is an excerpt from my new book Letter to the One Percent, published this month by Lulu Press, Inc.

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