Rich get richer, everyone else not so much in record U.S. expansion
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[July 02, 2019] By
Trevor Hunnicutt
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Last month Pink Floyd
frontman David Gilmour sold his guitar collection for $21.5 million,
including one piece - his famed "Black Strat" Fender Stratocaster - that
went for nearly $4 million to the owner of the U.S. National Football
League's Indianapolis Colts.
The "Money" singer set a musical instrument sales record in the charity
auction, marking yet another milestone for a booming market just weeks
after New York-based art dealer Sotheby's Holdings <BID.N>, auctioned
Claude Monet's "Meules" for $110.7 million, the most ever for an
Impressionist painting.
And it is not just instruments or paintings in high demand among the
world's billionaire set. Auction houses themselves now appear to be
prized vanity purchases: Just a few days before the Pink Floyd auction,
Franco-Israeli cable magnate Patrick Drahi, whose firm Altice earned
significant money in the United States, made a $3.7 billion bid for
Sotheby's, which had just hosted the Monet sale.
Welcome to the longest U.S. economic expansion in history, one perhaps
best characterized by the excesses of extreme wealth and an
ever-widening chasm between the unfathomably rich and everyone else.
Indeed, as the expansion entered its record-setting 121st month on
Monday, signs of a new Gilded Age are all over.
Big-money deals are getting bigger, from corporate mergers and
acquisitions, to individuals buying luxury penthouses, sports teams,
yachts and all-frills pilgrimages to the ends of the earth. And while
these deals grab headlines, there is a deeper trend at work. The number
of billionaires in the United States has more than doubled in the last
decade, from 267 in 2008 to 607 last year, according to UBS.
"The rich have gotten richer and they've gotten richer faster," said
John Mathews, Head of Private Wealth Management and Ultra High Net Worth
at UBS <UBSG.S> Global Wealth Management. "The drive or the desire for
consumption has just gone upscale."
But there are also signs of struggle and stagnation at lower-income
levels. The wealthiest fifth of Americans hold 88% of the country's
wealth, a share that has grown since before the crisis, Federal Reserve
data through 2016 shows. Meanwhile, the number of people receiving
federal food stamps tops 39 million, below the peak in 2013 but still up
40% from 2008 even though the country's population has only grown about
8%.
Still, a decade ago, this kind of growth was not thought possible. The
U.S. financial system was in a shambles and people feared bank failures
could permanently undermine capitalism. Policymakers scrambled to
stabilize markets and boost asset prices when U.S. housing markets
unraveled. They did less to tackle income and wealth inequality.
Now, many of the signs of mega-wealth that preceded that financial
crisis are once again on display.
WEALTH EFFECT
The examples are big and small.
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The painting by Claude Monet, part of the Haystacks "Les Meules"
series is displayed at Sotheby's during a press preview of their
upcoming impressionist and modern art sale in New York, U.S., May 3,
2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
The cost of a dinner at the French Laundry, the chic California restaurant, is
up 35% to $325 per person, from $240 10 years ago, beating inflation by nearly
20%.
Undergraduate tuition at Ivy League mainstay Columbia University is a hair under
$60,000 a year, up by half from $39,000 in the 2008 school year.
The U.S. stock market, measured by the S&P 500 <.SPX>, has tripled in the last
decade.
Hedge fund boss Ken Griffin set a record for a U.S. home sale when he bought a
$238 million penthouse condominium on "Billionaires' Row" just off New York
City's Central Park.
Yet rents in New York have risen twice as fast as wages, according to StreetEasy
data from 2010-2017, squeezing lower-income residents. U.S. home prices were
near their lowest levels of affordability since 2008, research by ATTOM Data
Solutions shows. And the number of homeless people sleeping in the city's
shelters is 70% higher than a decade ago, according to the Coalition for the
Homeless, an advocacy group.
"Under-resourced areas are not getting any better; the housing opportunity for
them is not getting any better," said Carolyn Valli, CEO at Central Berkshire
Habitat For Humanity, in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, at a recent economic policy
event. She said high healthcare costs and a lack of large employers mean fewer
jobs in some areas. Food, utilities and housing costs, meanwhile, remain high.
"It doesn't feel like a boom yet."
Anger over what some see as the unfairness of the economy has bubbled into the
country's politics, with Democratic presidential candidates promising to lower
healthcare costs, guarantee jobs and tax the rich.
Economic policymakers think the expansion could dim as stimulus from tax cuts
and low interest rates fades while a U.S.-China trade skirmish brews. They worry
that even the underwhelming gains made by low-income people in the last decade
are fragile and that people only recently brought into the workforce could be
the first fired when a recession hits.
"The benefits of this long recovery are now reaching these communities to a
degree that has not been felt for many years," Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome
Powell said last week. "Many people who in the past struggled to stay in the
workforce are now getting an opportunity to add new and better chapters to their
life stories. All of this underscores how important it is to sustain this
expansion."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Conway G. Gittens;
Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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