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LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology http://users.wowway.com/~marycay910 1

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Page 1: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY!WEALTH, INCOME, &

CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS

SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock

Professor of Sociology

http://users.wowway.com/~marycay910

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Page 2: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

ISSUES FOR DISCUSSION:WHAT IS INCOME? … WEALTH?

HOW DO THEY DIFFER?• What Do We Mean By Income?– What Does Thomas Shapiro (#5) Mean by

Income?

• What Do We Mean By Wealth?– What Does Shapiro Mean By Wealth?

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Page 3: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

INCOME• Earnings From Work:– Salaries or Wages

• Substitutions for Earnings:– Pensions, Social Security– Disability Payments, Unemployment Insurance,

Other Social Assistance

• Resources Obtained Over a Specific Period (Annually, Monthly, etc.)

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Page 4: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

WEALTH

• Total Value of a Family’s Financial Resources – Minus All Debts

• Includes: Stocks, Money in Banks, Other Investments

• Business(es)• Property Owned: Home(s), Cars, Planes • Debts Are Subtracted from Above • Remainder Are the Family’s “ASSETS”

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Page 5: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

COMPARING INCOME & WEALTH • How Much INCOME Do YOU (Personally) Have?

– Regular, Full-time Job?– Part-time Job?– Salary? Or Wages? What’s the Difference?

• Salary: Known Amount Per Month/Week• Wages: Amount Per Hour – Changes With Number of Hours

– Regular Income from Social Security or Pension?– Irregular Income from Day Jobs? – No Regular Income?

• How Much WEALTH Do YOU Personally Have? Your FAMILY?– Own a Home or Condominium? A Business? Or Several?– Own a Vacation Home? Own Any Other Real Estate (Rentals)?– Have a Bank Account? How Much Is In It?– Own Stocks, Bonds, Other Investments?

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Page 6: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

IMPORTANCE OF WEALTH

What Does Wealth Do? … Allow People to Do?• Tide You Over for a “Rainy Day”• Save for the Future – Plan for Retirement • Save for the Future: Children, Grandchildren• Build Up FAMILY Resources For Posterity• Ethnic Community Goals: “He Has PROPERTY!”

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Page 7: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

The Hidden Cost of Being African American: How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality

(Thomas Shapiro, 2004 – #5)

• Interviewed Nearly 200 Families• Asked About Their “Wealth” – Their “Assets” • How They Plan to & Actually Acquire Wealth• How They Use Their Assets

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Page 8: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

WHAT PEOPLE SAID ABOUT “WEALTH”

“Wealth”: Treated Differently from “Income”• People SPEND Income – They PRESERVE Assets • Wealth There for Emergencies: Personal Safety Net,

Cushion Against Unexpected Job Loss, Health Crisis • Quotes:

“Income Supplies Life Support; Assets Provide Opportunities.”• “Income is Limited. Assets You Hold Onto For the Future.”• “Wealth is Definitely Long Term. We Act As If It’s Not Even

There.”

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Page 9: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

CORRELATING WEALTH & INCOME• Wealth in America (Lisa Keister, 2000)

• Finds Little Correlation Between Wealth & Income• What Does This Mean?– People Who Have Wealth Primarily Have It From the PAST– It Was INHERITED– They Keep It In Reserve for Unexpected Expenses– It Helps Them Get a Good Education, Perhaps Good Jobs– But They Don’t Necessarily Make the Largest Salaries– They Live a Life Style Which Those With ONLY Income: • Cannot Afford – Cannot Understand!• They Always Have a “Back-Up”

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Page 10: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

People Confuse Wealth & Income

• True of General Public• Also True of Many Social Scientists & Research

Studies– Research Almost Always Focuses on INCOME!– Rarely Uses Wealth As a Variable!– We Compare High – Middle – Low Income People– We Do Not Look At How Much Wealth People Have –

Or How “Wealthy” Differ From Those Without Wealth

• Perpetuated By the American Media

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Page 11: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

EXAMPLES OF WHAT WEALTH CAN DO

• Assets to: – Send Kids to Private Schools “Good Contacts” – Support Children in College No School Loans– “Legacy” Admission to College (vs. Affirmative Action)– Provide Down Payments for Children’s Homes

Larger Homes, Better Neighborhoods, Better Schools– Provide Jobs/resources in Family Businesses

• EX: Republican Nat’l Committeewoman: “Get a Job!”• Ann Romney: “Had To Get Use Daddy’s Stocks & Loans To

Get Through College!

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Page 12: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

IMPACT ON AFRICAN-AMERICANS

• “Wealth Dearth” Main Impact: African-Americans• Not Been In a Position to Accumulate Wealth• Wealth Is Accumulated Over GENERATIONS• Wealth Is Not the Work of 1 Individual• Getting A Good Education & Good Job:– Provides a Good INCOME– It Does Not Produce WEALTH

• That Requires Several Generations!

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Page 13: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

APPLICATION TO WHITE ETHNICS

• Similar Impact on Other American Ethnic Groups– Jews Have Done Fairly Well in Getting Ahead – How Jews Came to Be Seen as “White” (Karen Bodkin)

– Irish, Italian, Greek, Jewish Became Doctors, Judges, etc. (Mary Waters #2)

– May Be Over-Stated Re Wealth– Many Italian & Polish & Some Irish Still Have Little

Wealth

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Page 14: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

WHY MAJOR IMPACT ON BLACKS?• Impact of Government Policies • Other Institutional Policies• AFTER Civil War & Reconstruction• Blacks Ineligible for Government Programs:– 1935: Roosevelt – Social Security Act: Passed By

Deals With Southern States: STATE Administration– Post WW II Benefits: FHA, VA, GI: Blacks Ineligible– Restrictive Covenants in Housing – Home Ownership: MAJOR Mechanism Wealth

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Page 15: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Home Ownership As Major Component of Wealth

• For Most People – “The Home” Is the Main (Only ?) Component of Wealth

• Minorities – esp. African-Americans – Missed Out on Many Early Aids to Home Ownership

• Recent Drop in Real Estate Values Left Many Families’ Home Investment in Shambles

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Page 16: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

CONSEQUENTLY:

• White English: Start Accumulating Wealth With a Major Asset – Began Pre-1900

• Other White Ethnic Groups: Began Around 1920 or Later – Had WW II Advantage

• African-Americans: Only Begin With the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s

• Consequently: Still Far Behind in Wealth

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Page 17: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

GOVERNMENT IMPACT ON OPINION:ASSET POVERTY LINE (APL)

Tool To Examine Resource Condition (“Wealth”) of American Families

• Ability to Survive for 3 Months Without Income (Conservative Assumption – Most Need More)

• 1999: Monthly Poverty Line (Family of 4) = $1,392• 3 x $1,392 = $4,175 – How Many Families Have It?• “Asset Poor” Families Have < $4,175 – Cannot

Survive for 3 Months Without Help• What If We Used a 6 or 9 Month Assumption?– Gap Would Be Even Greater

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Page 18: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

EXAMPLES OF ASSET POVERTY• Typical African-American: <$3,000 Assets• “Asset-Poor” Families:– 25% of African-American & Hispanic Families– 13% of White Families

• 2001 Recession Particularly Hard on Middle Class – Had Been Accumulating Some Assets

• Comparisons: – Whites (BASE): $1.00 Assets – Hispanics: $0.11 Assets– African-Americans: $0.07 Assets

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Page 19: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

IMPACT OF ASSET POVERTYInability to Survive Through Minor Emergency:• Unemployment, No Unemployment Benefits • What Happens If They Lose a Job? • … If Someone Gets Sick? • If There Is a Recession (EX: 2001)• Conservative Answer: “They Should Have

Planned Better!”

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Page 20: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

IS EDUCATION THE ANSWER?

• Impact of Education on Assets – Prior to 2001 Recession – Middle Class Families

• Middle Class Defined By Education:• If White Middle Class Owns $1 of Wealth– …Black Middle Class Owns $0.25 – …Up From $0.10 Earlier

• Wealth Is NOT Accumulated By Individuals …• But By Families – OVER TIME

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Page 21: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

SIGNIFICANCE OF WEALTH ISSUE• Illustrates the Interaction of Social Class & Its

Dimensions With Race & Ethnic Characteristics• Social Class Is Determined By Income, Wealth• Racial Characteristics Determine Social Class

Membership To a Considerable Extent • Ethnic Characteristics Determine Social Class

To a Lesser Extent• Social Institutions Influence These Patterns In

Major Ways21

Page 22: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

NEXT TOPIC:INFLUENCE OF THE MEDIA

• The Media: Creating the Middle Class• Defining the Middle Class• Defining Who Belongs To the Middle Class• Defining the “Others”

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Page 23: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

THE MEDIA ROLE IN SOCIAL CLASS DEFINITION

U.S. Most Stratified Industrial Society The Poor Are “Invisible,” Demeaned

Concerns of “Wealthy Class” EmphasizedWealthy Not Viewed as a “Class”

“Middle Class” Defined As Major Focus Middle Class Is NOT a “Working Class”

(Gregory Mantsios #6)

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Page 24: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

U.S. Most Stratified Industrial Society • Socio-Economic Class Influences Everything:– Jobs & Income – Quality of Education– Health & Safety– Social Contacts

• YET – Maintain an Illusion of “Egalitarianism”– “Horatio Alger” Myth

• Mass Media Influential in Defining Class• Decreasing Number of Media Outlets

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Page 25: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Media: Poor – Invisible, Demeaned

• 40 M Poor in U.S. (ME, NH, VT, RI, CN, NY, NJ) – Poor Are Increasing – 2x as Fast as Genl. Pop.

• Poor Are Ignored in Media – Do Not Exist• “Faceless” – Just a Number– Undeserving, At Fault: Cheats, Addicts, Lazy– Eyesore, an “Irritation” as Opposed to Maltreated– Occasional Attention – Affluent Christmas Gifts• HHs < $10K – Give 5.5% to Charity• HHs >$100K – Give 2.9% to Charity

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Page 26: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Poverty: Individual or Systemic?2 Views of Poverty:• Individual: The Media’s View– If You’re Poor, It’s Your Fault

• Systemic: The Reality:– Direct Result of Economic & Political Policies• Favor the Rich with Tax Cuts, Corp. Aid; • Deprive Poor of Jobs, Adequate Wages, Right to

Unionize• Produce a Society in Which General Wages Decrease

– “Blaming the Victim” (Wm. Ryan)

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Page 27: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Focus on Issues of “Wealthy Class”

• Great Attention to Stock Market – Though Few People Own Stock

• Attention to Taxes & Need to Decrease Them– Though Most Tax Decreases Favor Very Rich– Even the Poor Convinced Taxes Are Bad!

• Media Concern With “Extreme” Union Power • Little Attention to Corporate Political Influence

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Page 28: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Wealthy Not Defined as a Class

• Wealthy Behavior as a “Class” Ignored• Wealthy Influence in Society Ignored – Supreme Court: Corporate Right to Fund Lobbyists

• Most Political Power in Hands of Millionaires!• Wealthy Use Their Influence • Wealthy Image as “Benevolent” – Usually Donate to Arts, Wealthy Causes– Generally Do Not Give to Agencies Helping Poor

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Page 29: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Middle Class As Major Focus

• If the Poor Are Demeaned …• & Rich Are Not Defined As Rich …• What’s Left? • Emphasis on “Middle Class” – Everyone Not

“Poor” Defined as “Middle Class”• Leaves Viewers, Readers Believing: – “We” (Rich & Working People) Are All the Same …– Except for Those Lazy, Good-for-Nothing Poor!

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Page 30: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Evidence for Huge “Middle Class”

• Surveys: Most People (75%-90%) Identify Themselves as “Middle Class”

• Upper & Lower Class ID Is Rare (5%-10% Each)• Give Option of “Working Class”: – Divide “Middle Class” in Half– Even Objectively Poor Often ID As Middle Class– Impact of the Media’s Image of “the Poor”?

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Page 31: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Middle Class NOT a Working Class• How Did “Middle Class” Become “Middle”? • Most Started “Poor” – Worked Hard • Assisted By Government Programs:– Home Ownership Assistance– Educational Programs – Social Security, Unemployment, etc.

• Assistance from Labor Unions! (Our Parents?) • Today: Middle Class People Dissociate

Themselves from Working Class! – Business Students Believe in Trusting Employers 31

Page 32: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Reality of the Upper Class• Very Wealthy Control U.S. Society– Disproportionate Share of “Wealth” (vs. “Income”)– Have a Distinct Life Style– Interact Primarily Among Wealthy (Schools, Clubs)– Are a “Governing” Class – Run for Office, Get Elected, Get into Power– Ensure That Political & Economic Policies Favor

Their Own Interests (Taxes, Environment, Trade)– Avoid Societal Problems Through Private Programs

• Private Police, Schools, Clubs, etc.32

Page 33: LET’S TALK ABOUT MONEY! WEALTH, INCOME, & CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL CLASS SOC 3300 – Social Inequality Dr. M. C. Sengstock Professor of Sociology marycay910

Summary• U.S. Has Highly Structured Class System• Mass Media Influence Public Opinion re Economy &

Social Class System• Wealthy Control Society’s Economy, Politics– But Not Viewed as “Wealthy” by Society

• Most People ID as “Middle Class”• Middle Class Dissociate Themselves from “Working

Class”• Poor Are Demeaned & Blamed for Their Victimization

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