Three Classes
By Burt Likko (aka Transplanted Lawyer)
This post is about what exists in reality and how I’ve seen it, not what I think that reality ought to be or my moral approval or disapproval of it. On balance, I’m not particularly happy with seeing the world this way but I believe it to be a useful and accurate lens with which to understand things.
Class And Personal Experience
Perhaps the most consistent thing about the many phases of my own law practice has been the very wide spectrum of people that I have met, people from all sorts of walks of life in so many different phases of their lives. It’s hard to say whether one’s own experience is truly representative of the world under the best of circumstances, and my experiences have comes from people who are facing legal troubles. And you get a good sense of what people really are made of when you see them grappling with their troubles. So a substantial part of what I have to say here is based on the least reliable sort of evidence, which is anecdotal. I’ve little else other than media to rely on for observations about broad social classes, however – media both popular and academic, to be sure, but really, what other sources of information does anyone have about the way one’s own society is structured?
Also having substantial weight on my observations here is a book which has been influential among my peer group, Paul Fussell‘s Class. Prof. Fussell wrote this slim and trenchant observation on American society in 1983, in an attempt to explode the myth that the United States enjoys a classless society. Fussell identified nine primary socio-economic classes in the modern United States – five of which he described as “proletarian” or less – and asserted that upward mobility between the classes was extraordinarily difficult even if one overcame the odds and acquired sufficient money to afford the kinds of things that members of the next rank up might acquire with minimal difficulty.
For instance, Fussell posited that a “high proletarian” would simply never be comfortable or fit in as part of a world of “middle class” people, because the high prole’s recreational preferences, aesthetic tastes, educational experiences, and socialization habits would not match those of her neighbors. She would leave Christmas lights on the eaves of her house all year, change her own oil in the driveway of her house rather than take it to a mechanic, buy cheap beer to serve at a party when her guests would be expecting imports and white wine, prefer televised stock car racing to the Super Bowl, and so on. But more to the point would be that the high proletarian would in all probability never even get to the point that she would be in a position to make such a series of faux pas to her new neighbors because the kind of jobs she would need to get in order to make that kind of money would never open up to her – there would be formal qualifications for education and work experience that she could not meet, and social hurdles during job-selection processes which she could not overcome because of her lack of a peer group in the class to which she aspired.
The highest and lowest economic classes were, according to Fussell, at such economic extremes as to be functionally invisible to the rest of society – the very poor living under bridges, committing petty theft and scrounging garbage cans for their very survival and keeping out of sight of others so as to avoid detection by a world that hates them for their poverty; the very wealthy living in rarefied and isolated enclaves having isolated dinners served to them by their servants, in which the only subject able to generate any emotion was the pressing imperative for the preservation of capital.
The basic observation that the United States is a classified society, and that class boundaries are by this phase of our history significantly ossified and impermeable, seems so true as to be beyond reasonable dispute.
Real-Life Experience
In later editions of the book, Fussell added a new chapter, alleging the instance of a “Class X” which transcended the nine-tier system originally posited. “Class X’ers” engaged in the arts for their existence, could come from nearly any of the classes, and ‘enjoyed’ social mobility. Wealth to them would be irrelevant and if they exhibited skill at their craft, they could gain both fame and fortune and in that sense find easy acceptance in nearly every level of society. I have always been of the opinion that Fussell was induced to add this by his editors, who found the overall thesis of the original book too depressing despite Fussell’s interjection of acidly humorous observations about the behaviors of specimens from all nine classes. The existence of such a class is in too great of contrast, too blandly optimistic, and too obviously calculated to please editors of large New York publishing houses, to enjoy substantial credibility.
Real-life experience shows that there are artists and then there are artists. There is an economic spectrum within the arts and the great, great majority of those who make their career in the arts do so in exchange for shockingly low amounts of money and live in tremendous obscurity. Those who seek entrée into the elite levels of the arts world need the right kind of education (not necessarily found in a university, mind you) before undertaking their careers and the right kind of peer network so as to be noticed by the right kinds of people. In other words, they already need to at least be in the proximity of other elites in order to become elite themselves – which is, ultimately, the definition of a class.
Real-life experience contrasts with Fussell’s nearly thirty-year-old observations in many other ways. I look at myself – as a lawyer enjoying a good income and a superior education, I should fit in to what Fussell described as the “upper middle class,” the third-highest tier in Fussell’s taxonomy – a collection of people who have significant economic comforts, who actually want for nothing, but do not consider themselves wealthy and aspire to greater wealth than they have. But my neighbors are an aircraft engineer, a postal worker, an assistant human resources manager at a community college, a termite exterminator, a drywall applicator, and a retired plumber. Some have been to college, one (other than I) has completed graduate school. These people span the sorts of professions from “middle prole” to “upper middle”; but unlike the “upper middle” Fussell described, I actually know and socialize with my neighbors periodically. We all enjoy professional football, wear similar kinds of clothing when off work, we all sporadically enjoy nights out at various performing arts venues, and we all drink high-end beer and mid-range wines when we get together. The traits and backgrounds of these people (myself included) are all blended together.
This is not to disparage Fussell, who provides a useful framework upon which to build. But it is to say that economically, it’s not necessarily any great shakes to be a lawyer anymore and it’s entirely possible to have a very comfortable existence without the kind of educational and professional background that Fussell associated with the middle or upper middle class. Fussell’s regime is not fundamentally incorrect – but it is too compartmentalized. It describes a continuum, not a stratification.
Capital And Class
At the same time, Fussell observed that there are people of fantastic wealth, people for whom money is so plentiful as to never be an issue. These people, he says, behave differently than those who have to work for a living. Real-life experience bears that observation out and it is enduring. They have to do something with their money and they typically put it in things like real estate and securities. Thus, I encounter such people as clients. For them, money is like air – there is always a lot of it around and even if they don’t have it themselves at a particular moment, there will always be more around. There are differences in behavior and world view that come from that background.
Such people sometimes seem to lack anything one could identify as a “job.” They own stuff, they do things, but there seems to be little by way of structure or pattern to it. Some day-trade online for a few hours a day, some scour real estate opportunities in something like an orderly way, but for the most part they don’t pay a lot of attention to what other people do to support their activities. Like their lawyers – they hire me to do certain things and leave me alone to do them. This is pleasant enough for my practice, but in dealing with them they seem to lack a realistic understanding of what is happening on the ground with their own assets. Indeed, they are often unaware of the value of their own assets or the (highly variable for both better and worse) extent of their own creditworthiness.
More importantly, they don’t always have, or at least have access to, the money which so permeates their existence. And they don’t always live particularly well. I’m not talking about Mitt Romney flying coach to the winter Olympics because coach seats were the only ones available for the flight he wanted. I’m talking about trust fund babies who continually mooch money from their accountant friends while smoking a lot of pot and buying new guitars to ornament their beach houses. I’m talking about people on the make who try to put together eight-figure business deals based on half-baked ideas, and who have temper tantrums when their lawyers present them with bills for a few thousand dollars.
Those tantrums seemed inexplicable to me when I first encountered them, before I realized that my clients simply didn’t have the money and were using their emotions as a substitute for the money I had requested. All the shell games with future money and investors’ money they promised me at the end of the tantrums were proof that for them, the money was like the air – it was simply there, somewhere, and its presence was sufficient. Beyond that, they had never given thought about money at all.
The takeaway is that proximity to capital is the key to this class. Most of the people I’m referring to here earned their money the old-fashioned way – they got it from their parents, who got it from their parents, and so on and so on. Consequently, ready access to liquid money is not always a defining trait of this class, but money permeates their existence in a way that it does not for those who make their living like me and most likely like you, my Reader, by exchanging some kind of useful work – whether that is manual labor, intellectual work, or professional services – for money and thus survive.
Entitlement And Class
On the other end of the spectrum, I get to see people – middle-aged, sometimes even elderly – who seem to have little experience at all working. Their entire economic lives revolve around various kinds of entitlement payments from a variety of governmental agencies. Perhaps there is relatively more of this here in relatively generous California than in other parts of the country. But my experience living in Tennessee tells me that such people are found there in appreciable numbers as well. These are the apparently able-bodied people who always pay their rent late because they’re waiting for their Social Security and state disability payments, which despite being electronically wired to bank accounts, always seem to arrive late.
What amazes me about dealing with this collection of people is not so much that they can survive on this kind of existence. The governmental entitlement programs are designed to achieve that goal and while the shoe doesn’t always fit well, it does seem to fit most of the time. There are two things that stand out for me. First, a significant number of those who live in this way seem to do so with little real understanding of, and sometimes even apparent contempt for, people who exchange labor for money.
I say “contempt” rather than “resentment” because when I encounter them (either when they solicit my services or when I am evicting them from the homes they have failed to pay rent on) they do not evidence any real jealousy for either my station in life or my clients’. As best I can perceive, for them working is for suckers; why work when you can get the same money for doing the stuff you would rather be doing anyway? These are people in the entitlement system who grew up within it, who never really leave it for very long, and who seem to consider the ability to navigate it a fundamental life skill. They view others who lack those skills the same way I view people who do not understand the importance of having a driver’s license or a checking account. This is why I refer to this group of people as a class – they are born into it, socialized into its values, and consequently face significant difficulties migrating out of it.
The second observation is that for some of these people, there seems to be a pretty substantial skill set, a collection of experiences and shared knowledge passed from person to person – a curriculum, if you will – that leads to a lifestyle that seems almost enviable.
An unemployed person lacking formal educational credentials can live in section 8 housing, in a bigger house and a nicer neighborhood than I do, paying double-digit monthly rent out of pocket, which may or may not be paid at all. AFDC provides enough money for the entire family to eat on – and indeed in many cases to eat out at restaurants with some frequency. General relief provides money. State disability and social security disability payments provide more money. Periodic low-end employment results in continuing eligibility for unemployment benefits, as well as opportunities to make workers’ compensation and wrongful termination claims, from which both money and disability eligibility is extracted. The end result is that for one who is able to navigate the paperwork, one can achieve a comfortable lifestyle not involving work but including material comforts such as new cars, new clothing, state-of-the-art cell phones in near-constant use text messaging friends, and cable television. Should the rent go unpaid, they can frequently stall out the eviction for six months or more, and there is little lasting consequence for them as a result. When they get sick, their medical care and medications are paid for by a panoply of public assistance programs.
This may seem a lot when taken at first glance, but it really isn’t all that improbable. In terms of absolute dollars, cable TV, cell phones, clothing, and even auto leases are not terribly expensive anymore. One suspects that the cars lack insurance, that cash is not always readily available, and credit is on a downward spiral. Still, it’s hard to feel sorry for such folks because their lifestyles – the actual consuming they do – appears to exceed that of a large number of people who exchange their labor for money; they are able to engage in such consumption in exchange for conforming the patterns of their lives (how many children they have, where they live, etc.) to incentives created by the government and filling out the appropriate paperwork.
Abuse, Not Cheating
I hesitate to call such people “welfare cheats,” however, because it’s clear that they aren’t cheating the system – they are working within it, conforming to its rules, exercising their rights. They comply with the law. That’s not cheating. It might be something else we don’t like (call it “abuse”), it might be a cynical manipulation of the system beyond its intent, but particularly if your ethic is that the system permits something and therefore you can do it, it is more than possible to work the system into a life that features things that many people who actually work for a living cannot afford to enjoy – not the least of which is substantial amounts of free time.
This is not to say that everyone who is enrolled in government entitlement programs behaves in such a way, which when cumulated in that fashion looks very dishonest. Not everyone possesses either the skill set or the – how to put this politely? – disposition towards the government’s role in society necessarily to manipulate the system in this fashion. I’m telling myself that this sort of thing is exceeding rare. But I can’t say it’s nonexistent, having seen it with my own eyes. What I tell myself is that my own view of things is skewed; my own personal sampling of what’s out there in the world comes from being in the courthouse more days than not, and the population of a courthouse is, by definition, selective to include people who have legal problems and therefore not representative of the population as a whole.
The Tennessee Taxonomy
What all of this demonstrates to me is that wealth and affluence are different things. There are those who do not need to work, those who do need to work, those who lack the ability to work. But one’s degree of poverty or affluence is a variable independent of one’s ability or need to work for a living. My observation is that there are three classes of people – those who do not need to work for a living because of their association with (although not necessarily personal possession of) capital; those who exchange their labor for money in order to survive; and those who get what they need to live by way of governmental entitlements. This is a continuum, not a stratification. One might have access to capital but still either need or want to work for a living in order to secure cash flow. One might have a background of life “in the welfare system” but genuinely seek real employment.
What’s more, within each of these three broad bands of ways of life, there are degrees of affluence and poverty. Some “capital-class” people live very affluent lives, some have kind of sketchy existences. As common experience for most of us shows, some people make better money at their jobs than others. And some people are very good at working the system and some are not so good at it.
So it’s not right to say we have an “upper class,” a “middle class,” and a “lower class.” Fussell’s term “proletarian” was intended to reach people who do manual labor, construction trades, and the like, and do not enjoy wealth. But it is possible to make a reasonably handsome living turning a wrench, if you do it the right way and in the right place. It is possible to engage in a traditionally high-status profession like law, and only reap a meager income.
One’s class is determined not by one’s social status, education, or even income, but rather in how one’s subsistence is derived. This is a function of heredity.
One’s affluence is not determined by one’s income, but rather by one’s consumption. This is much more widely variable than might appear at first glance and Fussell’s taxonomy is either outmoded or was never actually right. This is why I’ve put together a new chart, a two-dimensional taxonomy that examines consumption separately from the means by which consumption is made possible.
The result is something that to my mind looks a little bit like a map of the state of Tennessee. I have it that way because it seems to me that those within the capital class will only be allowed to fall so low by their fellow class members – wealthy family, well-off associates, and so on – and will probably not wind up in abject, grinding poverty no matter what. And I want to reflect that while it is possible for those who live mainly on entitlements to live affluent lives, this is actually a pretty rare phenomenon.
Both axes of this taxonomy are not intended to be broken down into discrete units. If I had more skill at graphics, I’d show the colors fading smoothly in to one another. The curves of the left and right sides, representing the extremes of affluence and poverty, are not ones I’m married to, particularly, although the general shape is, I think, correct. So I’ll ask your indulgence, Reader, in imagining it drawn more proficiently than I have done here.
Government entitlements and subsidies may also be perceived in certain kinds of tax incentives – home ownership, for instance, is subsidized by the home mortgage interest deduction. I include those who are employed by the government in the “Labor Class” because they do, in fact, exchange their labor for money, and therefore have the same intellectual system of what skills and activities are valuable as those who pursue employment in the private sector. They have simply chosen to exchange their labor for the government’s money rather than a private employer’s money.
I’ve struggled as to how to classify Social Security in this taxonomy; people say, “But I earned Social Security,” and the benefits are derived, in part, on how much of the SSI tax one has paid throughout one’s lifetime. But Social Security is also used for disability regardless of what one has (putatively) paid in to the system and the system exists to ensure at least minimal survival-level income for everyone no matter what they’ve paid in. One’s retirement income also comes from savings and investments. The right way to treat it, as I see it, is to place it somewhere in between “Labor Class” and “Entitlement Class”; on my crudely-drawn chart, those who live mainly on Social Security would be right about the line between those two. One would move up or down based on what kind of other income was coming in.
Finally, should note that capital-class people will only be allowed to fall to a certain depth on the affluence-poverty scale, while entitlement-class people do eventually face an upper limit on how far they can rise on that scale. That is why my chart looks, roughly, like a map of the state of Tennessee. That is designed to represent the fact that there are floors and ceilings that apply based on how one’s sustenance is derived.
The big point of all this is to define wealth not as either net capital or the size of one’s income stream, but rather in terms of consumption – and to separate that level of consumption from the manner in which that consumption is obtained.
Dude. I enjoyed reading this essay.
I wince in antici…Report
pation for what some future comments will be.
But, seriously, this was an enjoyable essay to read and made a lot of really trenchant points.
Applause.Report
Great piece. It made me think of my father-in-law, who came from an independently wealthy family and gave up a law practice in his 40s to become an antique dealer. He now has no real liquid capital, survives by subsidies from the government, his partner’s deceased husband’s life insurer and his daughters, and more often than not spends more at antique shows than he sells. He owns a huge amount of very valuable stock whose appeal is somewhat esoteric and therefore hard to liquidate, and keeps it all in stacks in his house; neither the stock nor the house is insured at all because he thinks insurance is a suckers game. When any of his family offer to help him, say, set up a website so that he might sell his goods more efficiently, he scoffs at the idea; keeping up the site would interfere with his reading the NYT, restauranting and relaxing time. His van is about to be repossessed, because he has it’s engine rebuilt last Spring but never saw afterward why he should be bothered to pay the mechanic.
In 15+ years of marriage I have never been able to figure out how he survives. But survive he does, and survives nicely; everyone who meets him assumes that he is fabulously wealthy.Report
Perhaps I could have better described the class taxonomy as a cylinder in three-dimensional space rather than as a two-dimensional quadrilateral. Each of the three primary classes could have occupied a certain portion of arc along the cross-section of the cylinder, and one’s consumption affluence could have been reflected by one’s position along the cylinder’s length. This might better model individuals such as your father-in-law, whose experience as described here does not seem to incorporate any substantial exchange of labor for money, but does incorporate elements of both capital-proximity and entitlement.Report
> My observation is that there are three classes of people –
> those who do not need to work for a living because of their
> association with (although not necessarily personal
> possession of) capital; those who exchange their labor for
> money in order to survive; and those who get what they
> need to live by way of governmental entitlements.
Yeah, this seems like a pretty cogent assessment to me.
I do think that your upper bracket misses a tad bit of nuance. There are people who are on the dole who don’t want to be and really are members of the second class; they’re the people actually using the welfare system as the safety net it was originally designed to be. But there are also people (who are surrounded by capital), who don’t need to work for a living but nonetheless act as if they were members of the second class. That is to say, they possess that combined sense of responsibility and work ethic that makes them act as if they needed to trade their labor for money in order to survive.
Unlike the welfare guys who actually are members of the second class (but who are under duress), these people can’t cast off that capital security entirely, and thus they never really will be people who need to work in order to survive. But neither are they unaware of capital in the way that their economic fellows may be.
You point out that this is a continuum, so this is more of a nitpick than a critical issue, but the difference between the two types of cat are fairly significant from an economic engine standpoint.Report
I can’t help thinking of this.Report
Excellent post.
One thing to remember about Fussell is that, like anyone engaging in descriptive, non-quantitative sociology, he has to make use of ideal types to get his point across. Methodological issues abound, but if you’re going non-quant, you can hardly do otherwise.
Some things have changed since 1983 (just look at the phenomenal ascent of beer in class status!), but even accounting for such variation over time, I can readily think of exceptions to his rules in just about everyone of any class status whom I’ve known more than superficially. That’s not really the point, though. The point is that these things are the exceptions, not the rules.
At this point, a quant will ask how we know the difference, and he will have asked a very fair question indeed.
But anyway. I would push back a bit on the identity and reality of Class X, too. There really are people who can be called bohemians — the other word Fussell uses. Wealthy or poor, they don’t fit the cultural patterns of their economic class. Instead, they have the preferences and tastes of the bohemian milieu, which draws from both the wealthy and the poor. Think grad students and their professors; journalists high and low; even celebrity performers and their much lower-paid retinues.
What’s a bohemian do? I think I was literally sipping a martini when I read in Class that bohemians prefer gin over beer, bourbon, wine, or scotch (in ascending order, the beverages of the other classes!). Last month at a party I casually mentioned that I was reading Infinite Jest. The partygoers were upper mids, and not one of them had even heard of David Foster Wallace. I could hardly believe it. (Among my bohemian friends, I might be the very last to read Infinite Jest, much to my shame.)
Where proles either speak immigrant languages or merely English, and where the upper class sometimes cultivates a bit of very bad French — the badness just as important as the French, mind you — I’m about as good in that language as I am in English. Very bohemian indeed.
And so I would remain, even if I were to lose my job, and even if I were to write a bestseller and become rich.
Still, an excellent post about a book I really enjoyed.Report
While we were discussing Bach and Beethoven, in the back of my mind I realized that to almost all of my friends (smart, funny, successful, engaged, well-read, educated people), it would have been like a comparison of Glenn Miller and Harry James. I got a love of classical music from my parents, but that’s not common these days.Report
I wonder if the taxonomy described here is susceptible to quantification. What percentage of subject X’s income comes from paychecks, what from labor, what from private transactions like gifts and self-employment; coordinate that with the normalized value of subject X’s consumption. (Assume an objective way of normalizing consumption, of course.) Repeat for an appropriately large sample drawn from a diversity of communities, and now you’ve got numbers upon which statistical analysis can be performed and academics or quasi-academics can argue.Report
Hanging with librarians has shown me a great deal of contrasts.
This one may be old money and took a job/hobby out of the sheer adoration of books. That one may be the smartest of his/her family and got out of a bad situation by fighting through school and was the best candidate when a position opened.
But, and here’s the point, pretty much everybody has read this, that, or the other book. Or read an article/criticism/review of it. And *EVERYBODY* reads for pleasure. If you make a David Foster Wallace impersonation joke, half laugh and half get offended (I lie down on the floor, you see) but *EVERYBODY* knows who he is and starts arguing about him afterwards.
And everybody’s backgrounds couldn’t possibly be more diverse.Report
Who(1) is this David(2) Foster Wallace(3) fellow(4) ?
(1) “Who” being, of course, one of the famous words journalists use. Or at least used to, when they asked questions. God knows what the fuck they do now.
(2) When I was growing up, David was probably the most common name for boys; like the male version of Jennifer. I think I had four Davids in my freshman writing class. Today? I don’t think there’s one fishing David in my son’s entire elementary school.
(3) Doesn’t Wallace just sound like the perfect name for a kids book about a walrus?
(4) I was once drinking in a bar in Scotland, and someone said “I’d like to buy this fellow another pint.” I loved the congenial familiarity of it, the sound of it, and decided right there and then to start using it more often. Like here, for example.Report
Who is, as we all know (or should), on first.Report
While I enjoyed the piece, I still wonder if “class” is the appropriate distinction. Is all stratification “class” and does the cultural differentiation which a country person brings to city life (eg., Jed Clampett) nullify class distinction, or perhaps prove some other phenomenon — perhaps our class-free society still maintains a stratification based on other factors. If, for instance, my current thoughts on a new product were to allow me to build a successful business, then when attending a meeting with established business owners of the same level of success I would still be out of place — I do not golf. But this would be entirely out of experience and background and not founded in an impassable class barrier.
Perhaps the golfing class is better suited to the successful and da Bears fan class is more suited to the unsuccessful. These can be transcended by either learning golf or learning some important things about cheese and meat packing.Report
If you have ever met people whose family has been rich for generations then you would find out that no matter what games you learned or tastes you cultivated, you would always at the very best, be only nouveau riche. Having lots of money can’t buy you into “old money.”Report
“Having lots of money can’t buy you into “old money.””
Which, I am starting to believe, doesn’t require any money at all.Report
Of course not, ‘old money’ is American for aristocracy. It isn’t about who you are it’s about who you are it’s about who your great great grandfather killed in battle.
If you want to join then I suggest 1. Go into something like politics and show very publicly that you don’t need the pay. Your descendents will need to be able to talk about what you did without mentioning the grubby business of earning. 2. Put at least some of your money into property, aristocrats have loved owning land since forever and it is one of the few investments that is often kept for centuries, which you will need for.. 3. Wait until everyone who ever met you and everyone who ever met them is long dead and then your descendants get to be Upper Class.Report
Old money is money you can’t spend. Its capital, usually capital invested in things that are extremely illiquid – large tracts of land, antique furniture, the family firm – and from a conventional perspective unprofitable. So old money usually generates little or no liquid income. That’s also why there’s such a huge culture clash with new money – new money almost always means income and liquid investments and consumption, where old money is often none of those things. As Transplanted Lawyer said, a great many people in the capital class actually have almost no liquid assets.Report
To some extent, though, you can live off the money that money makes. A good portion of your fortune is illiquid, but depending on how much money we’re talking about, the money made off interest alone is more than most people make.Report
Certainly no-one in this situation would actually starve. But I know some British near-aristoracts, and I think most people would be shocked how badly many of those families live in the terms most of us measure success on. If your family owns half of Berkshire and has three enormous old drafty houses, the chances are most of the rent from the land goes back into the land and the houses, leaving very little actual cash. You may very well not be able to afford the kind of foreign vacation most working people wouldn’t bat an eyelid at.Report
An argument perhaps for an estate tax without a large exemption to accomodate the standard sob story about the ‘family farm’ that must be sold to pay the estate tax. I remember Jack Kemp used to argue for lower capital gains taxes on the grounds that it ‘frees up capital’ since people will sell their stock that has built up large gains and presumably use those funds elsewhere when capital gains taxes are low but will opt to ‘hold and hold’ their stock when capital gains taxes are high (thereby making it ‘dead capital’ invested in old industries rather than new and exciting ones).
Maybe, though, income inequality driving huge estates at the top is actually creating large pools of ‘dead capital’ that is less interested in being productive and more interested in preserving a class distinction for the unproductive. An estate tax forces some of this dead capital on the market where it will be priced according to its actual productivityReport
The only way to eliminate class is to eliminate all stratification, real or potential. That seems contrary to liberty. Comes from an alternative frame of reference, which I prefer to reject.Report
Do we have any evidence at all that Transplanted Lawyer is actually named Burt Likko, and did not in fact choose that pseudonym to enhance his blue collar street cred for the purposes of this post?
More seriously, this is some interesting stuff. I do think divisions within the “laboring classes” (as you put it) remain important, anecdotes to the contrary notwithstanding. The rise of the service sector strikes me as particularly significant. If your entire career path consists of low-level jobs that require a subservient attitude, maybe we shouldn’t be surprised to see a contempt for people who work for a living develop. As you say, there is a continuum between the three categories, and I wonder if the service sector represents a gray area between the laboring and entitlement classes, made up of people who have been conditioned to view work contemptuously or as something of a last resort because their available career paths are so unsatisfying.Report
Service sector seems an awfully broad category to category to me. Of course a checkout worker is paid for a service rather than for products he makes but so to is a lawyer, accountant or a teacher. I doubt very much that all the jobs that involve selling your services involve low level jobs that require a suservient attitude.Report
Subservience may be a matter of perception, particularly in the realm of professional services.
My clients may see me as a much more assertive figure than I perceive myself. They may see my relationship with a court as neutral or even that I have the ability to make the court do my bidding through the magic of my power as a lawyer. They may see me drafting documents or making arguments in court without any overt direction from them, or more often rely on my reporting back to them about what I did on their behalf, and perceive that I am the dominant figure and they are the subservient ones. I doubt that many of them would consider me a “servant,” albeit a smart one.
But I see myself as very much subservient to the courts and frequently to law enforcement; my attitude towards my clients when I render my services is that they set the objectives for my employment, not I, and they are the ones with the authority to make agreements. I see myself as very much subservient to my clients. This does not particularly bother me, but Will’s point is well-taken — for some, having to assume a position of subservience at all, to anyone, under any circumstances, may be a perceived as an erosion to one’s ego, something which perhaps can be tolerated under some circumstances but never embraced.Report
Not just lawyers. Remember Cher’s plumber dad in Moonstruck? “Then, there’s copper. Which is the only pipe I use. It’s expensive, but it saves money in the long run. And ya gotta spend money to save money.” “Uh…I think we better do what he says…”Report
Granted subservience is in the eye of the beholder but given you make being a lawyer part of your blog name I doubt that it is a job you have contempt for. There is also the fact that a miner or farm labourer who is producing a thing rather than a service is not any less required to serve his employers.
I supose what I’m saying is that I have a hard time believing that is that being in a service industry necessarily involves being more subservient that being in manufacturing or primary production.
But I’m going off at a tangent, Will’s point that being expected to act subservient can be demoralising is well taken. I left my last job for similar reasons so I can certainly sympathise.Report
Congratulations on a most interesting and readable guest post!
Now if I could only think of something smart to add to the conversation.Report
Hah, that’s what I’ve thought for hours. Though, I’m not sure I’ve added anything smart to the conversation.Report
This is really interesting and to be honest I’m wondering if this fits pretty well with our political divisions of late.
A class of people whose proximity to capital and business gives them Wall Streets cultural aversion to governmental interference it doesn’t control and/or taxation. Even though in real terms they may not actually lose all that much money and in very real terms marginal rates mean nothing to them. However, they do get on at least one if not multiple levels that Washington’s involvement means less oxygen in the room.
A class of people who see governmental assistance as a normal and necessary part of life, one that has imposes few additional burdens, if any, to increase. However, it’s also a class of people that don’t have a particular connection to the labor economy and possibly view participation in it as worse trade-off for them, particularly in the short term, even if down the road they might make more money.
Somewhere in the middle you have a a group of laborers on a continuum of multi-colored collars who are aspirational in a way that connects long-term efforts and payoffs in a unique way.
With respect to political power you have two parties rooted in either end of the spectrum that then propagandize contrasting messages to the center to convince them to support the something for little to nothing ethos of the entitlement class OR the view of the capital class that uncontrolled government is a competitor for advancement not a partner.
Idk…something to mull over, though it would imply the that semi-self conscious role of the laboring middle class to play political kingmaker rather than put forth any kind of ethos reinforcing political view might be a backfiring gamble that gives the illusion of political clout in the center, without actually delivering anything.Report
Interesting question for someone in the middle: which is more likely to happen to you: advancing to the top, or falling the the bottom?Report
I suspect that it’s more likely to move right or left than up or down.Report
This is an interesting take on the issue, Kyle. In your construct, do you think that the laboring class aspires to entree into the capital class (regardless of whether that is a realistic aspiration) or more modestly to increase the amount of cash flow their labor produces for them?
My suspicion is that most members of the class of people whose economic existence consists primarily of exchanging work for money have no realistic concept of what it is to have an economic existence solidly in the capital class, and think of it as a life of leisure and luxury.
In terms of political behavior and (small-d) democratic power, I would posit (rather than proclaim, because these assumptions could turn out to be incorrect) that the labor class has an overwhelming amount of actual power at the ballot box and its behavior it best analyzed in terms of internal cleavages rather than cleavages between capital, labor, and entitlement classes. The numbers of the more-or-less pure capital class are small enough that they can be safely disregarded from a voting behavior perspective, and members of the numbers of the entitlement class are significantly unlikely to vote as compared to the members of the other classes.Report
At first thought,
I would imagine that larger cultural issues and backgrounds come into play but on balance probably aspirational to modestly increase their cash flow.
If I were to conjecture wildly, I would say that immigrant communities are probably more sensitive to perceptions of group advancement and might be less inclined to become/be seen as leisurely wealthy than successful infiltrators of the high professional classes.
That the more landed a group is the more likely generational thinking and entry into the capital class is on the horizon but that might be indistinguishable from our culture’s feeling that the next generation ought to live better than our own ala John Adams, “I must study war and politics…”
I’ll have to think about the political behavior more but I’m tempted to say that comparatively strong ability of the capital and entitlement classes to articulate a strong political POV gives them an edge in determining what the voters are actually voting for which is a naturally powerful tool.Report
I don’t have a whole lot to add from a sociological perspective, as I’m still pondering all of this, but when all else fails, go anecdotal.
My great-great grandfather was something of a pioneer in his field and made a boatload of money. That was new money, but his children spent it on “old money” things, finishing schools and boarding schools to learn all of the proper ways to react. However, his estate was split very unevenly, and my branch was on the losing side of that. So my mother was in the position of being educated and cultured as though they had money… but not actually having the money. The result was one daughter (my aunt) marrying into wealth and re-establishing that lifestyle, but it ending for the other two with one embracing what my mother calls “the sharecropper lifestyle” and Mom trying to keep us up to snuff but ultimately failing in part due to it all being quite alien to the man that she married.Report
This statement is true if you constrain your definition of “the arts” in a way that makes the statement true. If you use a definition more along the lines of the definition used by the IRS it becomes false.
Not sure if this would cause you to revise your post.Report
If I use the IRS definition (cite or reference, please?) would my statement become untrue in that there are no wealthy IRS-defined artists, or would it become untrue in that there are only wealthy IRS-defined artists?
I used a mental definition of “the arts” as inclusive of the performing arts (e.g., recording and performing music; acting in theater, for broadcast, and/or for film) and the expressive arts (e.g., making and selling paintings, sculptures, written media such as books or scripts or poetry). My impression is that most people who do these things as their primary source of income don’t make a lot of money; however, the ones at the top of their professions make a very large amounts of money at it.
How might one verify whether it is Tony Comstock or I who is closer to objective reality?Report
A recent (hand-wring) NEA report put the average artist annual income at about $38K. Average personal annual wages for all jobs were about $42K.
Faced with the shocking income gap of $4K, the NEA’s spin what that artist make much less than other professions with similar levels of education. (The income gap there was, wait for it, $6K/year)
Cry me a fucking river.
The whole “artist don’t make a lot of money” bullshit appeals to non-hackers who do not pack the gear to serve in my beloved corp and the turd blossoms who love them.Report
Average in terms of mean or median? Do you recall?Report
It’s probably just me but when I read this sentence I understand all the words but not when put together this way. I get general disaproval of those who say artists are poor but beyond that.
The nearest I get is.
“People who don’t hack computers or have enough equipment to serve in the marines and flowers made of shit.”Report
Mean or median makes a big deal of difference here. Having Stephen King in your average will make the compensation look great, even if 99 out of 100 people don’t break $10K a year.
Likewise the definition of artist here is important. Is a person who does illustrations in an advertising agency an artist or just a person who creates illustrations that are sold as art? Is acting in a commercial for mouthwash making a living as an artist or only acting in a drama/comedy? In both cases you can say technically everyone here is making a living doing art but only the latter examples are making a living as an artist.Report
I do have to say that I find it tiresome when someone’s definition of “class” dovetails neatly with their definition of “rural white person of average income”, which is what Fussell appears to be doing.
I do, however, think that the blogger’s Tennessee Taxonomy is possibly the best definition of “American class” you could ask for.Report
It doesn’t quite dovetail that nicely. You can have two rural white people both with average incomes but belonging to two different classes….one person’s ‘average income’ coming from say being a contractor and another person’s ‘average income’ coming from disability payments.
The first thing I thought when I read this was that we should look at policies to address the ‘entitlement class’ because getting them off the dole should be a high priority. But more interesting is that it seems the ‘capital class’ creates its own ‘entitlement mentality’. There are indeed a class of people who make their way by being parasites on the ‘capital class’ either as heirs to fortunes or simply ‘hangers on’ (think of OJ’s “Kato” Kaelin, his ‘houseguest’…..on the Housewives series you also notice that some of the women have ‘houseguests’ who seem to have found a way to enscone themselves in the homes of the rich).
This is somewhat ironic IMO because you’d think the market system would drive towards efficiency and productivity but it seems like many in the ‘capital class’ are not very efficient nor productive. Yet it does seem to create an upper class of people whose culture has little place for actual work (shared by the lower ‘entitlement class’). This charge is deflected by the claim that they are doing ‘very important stuff’ (day trading, playing in real estate markets, ‘putting together’ business deals…..I’m reminded of the numerous Housewives shows where the rich wives spend their time putting on fashion shows, launching lines of clothes, jewelry, perfume, recording songs or writing self-esteem books. It would seem a whole industy exists to cater to helping some rich people delude themselves into thinking they are being productive just as a industry exists to help the entitlement class feel good about capturing the various entitlements they secure (think of those ‘structured settlement’ commercials you see on daytime TV as well as commercials for slip and fall /disability lawyers)).
It makes one wonder if there is perhaps something backwards here. Perhaps the ‘entitlement/rich’ class are the smart ones and the workers are the suckers? 🙂Report
“You can have two rural white people both with average incomes but belonging to two different classes….one person’s ‘average income’ coming from say being a contractor and another person’s ‘average income’ coming from disability payments.”
Except that Fussell would say that both of those persons were the same ‘class’, at least the way he defines classes.
“There are indeed a class of people who make their way by being parasites on the ‘capital class’ either as heirs to fortunes or simply ‘hangers on’…”
But that’s not a ‘class’ as defined by Transplanted Lawyer. That’s just an occupation. He’d say that those people you describe are probably solidly within the ‘labor class’, in that they believe Work is necessary to obtain Wealth. The Tennessee Taxonomy doesn’t make any distinctions about what kind of work–indeed, there’s just as much of an industry providing services to the ‘entitlement class’ as there is to the ‘capital class’.
“This is somewhat ironic IMO because you’d think the market system would drive towards efficiency and productivity but it seems like many in the ‘capital class’ are not very efficient nor productive. ”
In a way, this is addressed by Transplanted Lawyer’s comment that “[i]n terms of absolute dollars, cable TV, cell phones, clothing, and even auto leases are not terribly expensive anymore.” This applies to both ends of the scale. Society is becoming increasingly removed from the confluence of income and survival; that is, you don’t have to work anymore to obtain what’s needed for survival (and, depending on your tastes, the what’s needed for luxury.)Report
Actually the way I read it the rural white person whose on disability would be in the ‘entitlement class’ while the one that’s a self employed home contractor would be in the ‘labor class’. Both, though, may enjoy the same lifestyle choices and ability to consume. What I take from his graph is that you can have a low ability to consume and be in the ‘capital class’ (I was when I was a kid, my father died when I was very young and left my mom a trust fund from his life insurance payout. While the fund provided a monthly stipend sufficient to have a lower to middle middle class lifestyle, we were technically living on capital the way Paris Hilton is). The graph is stubby near the bottom because while you can be an ‘entitlement class’ person and achieve some pretty impressive levels of consumption there is a limit. ‘Welfare Queen’ rhetoric from Reagan’s California years aside, you probably can’t find a way to live like Paris Hilton off of food stamps, Medicaid and general assistance.
This applies to both ends of the scale. Society is becoming increasingly removed from the confluence of income and survival; that is, you don’t have to work anymore to obtain what’s needed for survival (and, depending on your tastes, the what’s needed for luxury.)
Yes but the usual thinking with a market system is that rewards (here ability to consume) should follow productivity. Warren Buffet enjoys a large ability to consume because he works to move capital into worthy investments. Likewise ‘The Dude’ from The Big Lebowski choose not to do much of anything and as a result doesn’t have the options to consume much of anything aside from bowling and pot.
What’s interesting about this observation by Transplanted Lawyer is that the market seems pretty good at creating a useless ‘capital class’ that, like the entitlement class, doesn’t actually do much of anything but is rewarded with the ability to consume. This class is not looked down on as much because technically it’s ‘their’ money and because the market actually caters to their illusion that they are doing useful things (like day trading or in Lawyers case have hours of legal time spent on pie in the sky ‘business deals’ that at the end of the day amount to nothing of value). Here I think Bravo’s Housewives show is a really, really good illustration of the market’s cottage industry that works to create the delusion that a portion of the ‘capital class’ is actually doing something productive. Contrast this with either Paris Hilton or The Dude, both of whom seem quite aware they aren’t doing anything productive and are simply out to enjoy whatever ability to consume they can.Report
“Actually the way I read it the rural white person whose on disability would be in the ‘entitlement class’ while the one that’s a self employed home contractor would be in the ‘labor class’.”
Per the Tennessee Taxonomy in the post, yes. Per Fussell’s definition, no. Like I said.
“Yes but the usual thinking with a market system is that rewards (here ability to consume) should follow productivity. ”
And the capital class is indeed productive. Transplanted Lawyer gets paid to provide them with legal services; makers of luxury items derive income from the existence of the capital class’s trust funds and investments; heck, even those fund and investment managers wouldn’t have jobs if there weren’t funds and investments for them to manage. While the members of the capital class might not be earning money through their own effort, it’s not like they don’t put money into the economy.
Indeed, what TL suggests is that the notion of “get money because of personal effort” is an expression of class morality, not a universal truth.Report
I have to say this essay was excellent!Report