<kbd id="12vh1"></kbd>
      <tfoot id="12vh1"></tfoot>

      Fed chairman warns of "crucial" problems faced by U.S. middle class amid slow income growth

      Source: Xinhua| 2019-05-10 09:36:13|Editor: Shi Yinglun
      Video PlayerClose

      WASHINGTON, May 9 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell said here Thursday that the United States faces a two-fold challenge of facilitating low-income families reaching middle class and ensuring that the middle class enjoy basic economic security.

      "Surveys suggest that many Americans believe being middle class means having a secure job and the ability to save," Powell said in his opening remarks to the Federal Reserve System's 11th Community Development Research Conference, a biennial event aimed at improving economic well-being of families and communities.

      "In recent decades, income growth for middle-income households has lagged behind that for high-income households," Powell said.

      The central bank governor offered three observations. The first, he said, is "the long-term decline in relative income growth and upward economic mobility for those in the middle."

      Citing a number of research results, Powell said income has grown more slowly for middle-class households since the 1970s than for those with higher incomes, resulting in wider income inequality.

      The generational improvements in living standards among the middle class, according to Powell, "have steadily diminished," due to the increase of income inequality and the slower productivity growth.

      "In the 1950s, better than 80 percent of children born in middle-class households grew up to out-earn their parents, but more recently only around half do," he said.

      The second observation, Powell said, is the widening gap in economic status and prospects between those with a college degree and those without one.

      He said compared with the 1950s and 1960s, it is increasingly less likely for working-age Americans without college degrees to find jobs than those that have.

      Powell also said "the prospect of moving up the economic ladder depends on factors beyond effort and talent, including your family, the neighborhood you grow up in, and the quality of the primary and secondary schools you attend."

      Race and ethnicity continue to cause disparities in economic outcomes among Americans, he added.

      TOP STORIES
      EDITOR’S CHOICE
      MOST VIEWED
      EXPLORE XINHUANET
      010020070750000000000000011100001380476491
      免费国产精品专区,香蕉视频精品小姐福利,强行征服邻居人妻hd高清完整,伊人久久精品无码AV专区 97人人超碰国产精品最新o 亚洲AV无码成人网站国产网站

        <kbd id="12vh1"></kbd>
        <tfoot id="12vh1"></tfoot>