Sign of the Times
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)
The middle class is disappearing, and big business is taking notice:
For generations, Procter & Gamble Co.’s growth strategy was focused on developing household staples for the vast American middle class.Now, P&G executives say many of its former middle-market shoppers are trading down to lower-priced goods—widening the pools of have and have-not consumers at the expense of the middle.
That’s forced P&G, which estimates it has at least one product in 98% of American households, to fundamentally change the way it develops and sells its goods. For the first time in 38 years, for example, the company launched a new dish soap in the U.S. at a bargain price.
P&G’s roll out of Gain dish soap says a lot about the health of the American middle class: The world’s largest maker of consumer products is now betting that the squeeze on middle America will be long lasting.
“It’s required us to think differently about our product portfolio and how to please the high-end and lower-end markets,” says Melanie Healey, group president of P&G’s North America business. “That’s frankly where a lot of the growth is happening.”
In the wake of the worst recession in 50 years, there’s little doubt that the American middle class—the 40% of households with annual incomes between $50,000 and $140,000 a year—is in distress. Even before the recession, incomes of American middle-class families weren’t keeping up with inflation, especially with the rising costs of what are considered the essential ingredients of middle-class life—college education, health care and housing. In 2009, the income of the median family, the one smack in the middle of the middle, was lower, adjusted for inflation, than in 1998, the Census Bureau says.
I’m sure the answer lies in more cuts to Medicaid, and in firing more government workers. That will solve the problem.
Assuming, of course, that our policymakers think this is a problem, as opposed to an adjustment to bring the “spoiled” American middle class more in line with the median standard of living in the BRIC countries that are all the rage with Wall Street Journal-reading MBAs.
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