Some asshole talking shit.
Memo: From Nick Hanauer
To: My Fellow Zillionaires
You probably don’t know me, but like you I am one of
those .01%ers, a proud and unapologetic capitalist. I have founded, co-founded
and funded more than 30 companies across a range of industries—from itsy-bitsy
ones like the night club I started in my 20s to giant ones like Amazon.com, for
which I was the first nonfamily investor. Then I founded aQuantive, an Internet
advertising company that was sold to Microsoft in 2007 for $6.4 billion. In
cash. My friends and I own a bank. I tell you all this to demonstrate that in
many ways I’m no different from you. Like you, I have a broad perspective on
business and capitalism. And also like you, I have been rewarded obscenely for
my success, with a life that the other 99.99 percent of Americans can’t even
imagine. Multiple homes, my own plane, etc., etc. You know what I’m talking
about. In 1992, I was selling pillows made by my family’s business, Pacific
Coast Feather Co., to retail stores across the country, and the Internet was a
clunky novelty to which one hooked up with a loud squawk at 300 baud. But I saw
pretty quickly, even back then, that many of my customers, the big department
store chains, were already doomed. I knew that as soon as the Internet became
fast and trustworthy enough—and that time wasn’t far off—people were going to
shop online like crazy. Goodbye, Caldor. And Filene’s. And Borders. And on and
on.
Realizing that, seeing over the horizon a little
faster than the next guy, was the strategic part of my success. The lucky part
was that I had two friends, both immensely talented, who also saw a lot of
potential in the web. One was a guy you’ve probably never heard of named Jeff
Tauber, and the other was a fellow named Jeff Bezos. I was so excited by the
potential of the web that I told both Jeffs that I wanted to invest in whatever
they launched, big time. It just happened that the second Jeff—Bezos—called me
back first to take up my investment offer. So I helped underwrite his tiny
start-up bookseller. The other Jeff started a web department store called
Cybershop, but at a time when trust in Internet sales was still low, it was too
early for his high-end online idea; people just weren’t yet ready to buy
expensive goods without personally checking them out (unlike a basic commodity
like books, which don’t vary in quality—Bezos’ great insight). Cybershop didn’t
make it, just another dot-com bust. Amazon did somewhat better. Now I own a
very large yacht.
But let’s speak frankly to each other. I’m not the
smartest guy you’ve ever met, or the hardest-working. I was a mediocre student.
I’m not technical at all—I can’t write a word of code. What sets me apart, I
think, is a tolerance for risk and an intuition about what will happen in the
future. Seeing where things are headed is the essence of entrepreneurship. And
what do I see in our future now?
I see pitchforks.
At the same time that people like you and me are
thriving beyond the dreams of any plutocrats in history, the rest of the
country—the 99.99 percent—is lagging far behind. The divide between the haves
and have-nots is getting worse really, really fast. In 1980, the top 1 percent
controlled about 8 percent of U.S. national income. The bottom 50 percent
shared about 18 percent. Today the top 1 percent share about 20 percent; the
bottom 50 percent, just 12 percent.
But the problem isn’t that we
have inequality. Some inequality is intrinsic to any high-functioning
capitalist economy. The problem is that inequality is at historically high
levels and getting worse every day. Our country is rapidly becoming less
a capitalist society and more a feudal society. Unless our policies change
dramatically, the middle class will disappear, and we will be back to late
18th-century France. Before the revolution.
And so I have a message for my fellow filthy rich,
for all of us who live in our gated bubble worlds: Wake up, people. It won’t
last.
If we don’t do something to fix the glaring
inequities in this economy, the pitchforks are going to come for us. No society
can sustain this kind of rising inequality. In fact, there is no example in
human history where wealth accumulated like this and the pitchforks didn’t
eventually come out. You show me a highly unequal society, and I will show you a
police state. Or an uprising. There are no counterexamples. None. It’s not if,
it’s when.
Many of us think we’re special because “this is
America.” We think we’re immune to the same forces that started the Arab
Spring—or the French and Russian revolutions, for that matter. I know you
fellow .01%ers tend to dismiss this kind of argument; I’ve had many of you tell
me to my face I’m completely bonkers. And yes, I know there are many of you who
are convinced that because you saw a poor kid with an iPhone that one time,
inequality is a fiction.
Here’s what I say to you: You’re living in a dream
world. What everyone wants to believe is that when things reach a tipping point
and go from being merely crappy for the masses to dangerous and socially
destabilizing, that we’re somehow going to know about that shift ahead of time.
Any student of history knows that’s not the way it happens. Revolutions, like
bankruptcies, come gradually, and then suddenly. One day, somebody sets himself
on fire, then thousands of people are in the streets, and before you know it,
the country is burning. And then there’s no time for us to get to the airport
and jump on our Gulfstream Vs and fly to New Zealand. That’s the way it always
happens. If inequality keeps rising as it has been, eventually it will happen.
We will not be able to predict when, and it will be terrible—for everybody. But
especially for us.
The most ironic thing about rising inequality is how
completely unnecessary and self-defeating it is. If we do something about it, if
we adjust our policies in the way that, say, Franklin D. Roosevelt did during
the Great Depression—so that we help the 99 percent and preempt the
revolutionaries and crazies, the ones with the pitchforks—that will be the best
thing possible for us rich folks, too. It’s not just that we’ll escape with our
lives; it’s that we’ll most certainly get even richer.
The model for us rich guys here should be Henry Ford,
who realized that all his autoworkers in Michigan weren’t only cheap labor to
be exploited; they were consumers, too. Ford figured that if he raised their
wages, to a then-exorbitant $5 a day, they’d be able to afford his Model Ts.
What a great idea. My suggestion to you is: Let’s do
it all over again. We’ve got to try something. These idiotic trickle-down
policies are destroying my customer base. And yours too.
It’s when I realized this that I decided I had to
leave my insulated world of the super-rich and get involved in politics. Not
directly, by running for office or becoming one of the big-money billionaires
who back candidates in an election. Instead, I wanted to try to change the
conversation with ideas—by advancing what my co-author, Eric Liu, and I call
“middle-out” economics. It’s the long-overdue rebuttal to the trickle-down
economics worldview that has become economic orthodoxy across party lines—and
has so screwed the American middle class and our economy generally. Middle-out
economics rejects the old misconception that an economy is a perfectly
efficient, mechanistic system and embraces the much more accurate idea of an
economy as a complex ecosystem made up of real people who are dependent on one
another.
Which is why the fundamental law of capitalism must
be: If workers have more money, businesses have more customers. Which makes
middle-class consumers, not rich businesspeople like us, the true job creators.
Which means a thriving middle class is the source of American prosperity, not a
consequence of it. The middle class creates us rich people, not the other way
around.
On June 19, 2013, Bloomberg published an article I
wrote called “The Capitalist’s Case for a $15 Minimum Wage.” Forbes labeled it
“Nick Hanauer’s near insane” proposal. And yet, just weeks after it was
published, my friend David Rolf, a Service Employees International Union
organizer, roused fast-food workers to go on strike around the country for a
$15 living wage. Nearly a year later, the city of Seattle passed a $15 minimum
wage. And just 350 days after my article was published, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray
signed that ordinance into law. How could this happen, you ask?
It happened because we reminded the masses that they
are the source of growth and prosperity, not us rich guys. We reminded them
that when workers have more money, businesses have more customers—and need more
employees. We reminded them that if businesses paid workers a living wage
rather than poverty wages, taxpayers wouldn’t have to make up the difference.
And when we got done, 74 percent of likely Seattle voters in a recent poll
agreed that a $15 minimum wage was a swell idea.
The standard response in the minimum-wage debate,
made by Republicans and their business backers and plenty of Democrats as well,
is that raising the minimum wage costs jobs. Businesses will have to lay off
workers. This argument reflects the orthodox economics that most people had in
college. If you took Econ 101, then you literally were taught that if wages go
up, employment must go down. The law of supply and demand and all that. That’s
why you’ve got John Boehner and other Republicans in Congress insisting that if
you price employment higher, you get less of it. Really?
The thing about us businesspeople is that we love our
customers rich and our employees poor.
Because here’s an odd thing. During the past three
decades, compensation for CEOs grew 127 times faster than it did for workers.
Since 1950, the CEO-to-worker pay ratio has increased 1,000 percent, and that
is not a typo. CEOs used to earn 30 times the median wage; now they rake in 500
times. Yet no company I know of has eliminated its senior managers, or
outsourced them to China or automated their jobs. Instead, we now have more
CEOs and senior executives than ever before. So, too, for financial services
workers and technology workers. These folks earn multiples of the median wage,
yet we somehow have more and more of them.
The thing about us businesspeople is that we love our
customers rich and our employees poor. So for as long as there has been
capitalism, capitalists have said the same thing about any effort to raise
wages. We’ve had 75 years of complaints from big business—when the minimum wage
was instituted, when women had to be paid equitable amounts, when child labor
laws were created. Every time the capitalists said exactly the same thing in
the same way: We’re all going to go bankrupt. I’ll have to close. I’ll have to
lay everyone off. It hasn’t happened. In fact, the data show that when workers
are better treated, business gets better. The naysayers are just wrong.
Most of you probably think that the $15 minimum wage
in Seattle is an insane departure from rational policy that puts our economy at
great risk. But in Seattle, our current minimum wage of $9.32 is already nearly
30 percent higher than the federal minimum wage. And has it ruined our economy
yet? Well, trickle-downers, look at the data here: The two cities in the nation
with the highest rate of job growth by small businesses are San Francisco and
Seattle. Guess which cities have the highest minimum wage? San Francisco and
Seattle. The fastest-growing big city in America? Seattle. Fifteen dollars
isn’t a risky untried policy for us. It’s doubling down on the strategy that’s
already allowing our city to kick your city’s ass.
It makes perfect sense if you think about it: If a
worker earns $7.25 an hour, which is now the national minimum wage, what
proportion of that person’s income do you think ends up in the cash registers
of local small businesses? Hardly any. That person is paying rent, ideally
going out to get subsistence groceries at Safeway, and, if really lucky, has a
bus pass. But she’s not going out to eat at restaurants. Not browsing for new
clothes. Not buying flowers on Mother’s Day.
Is this issue more complicated than I’m making out?
Of course. Are there many factors at play determining the dynamics of employment?
Yup. But please, please stop insisting that if we pay low-wage workers more,
unemployment will skyrocket and it will destroy the economy. It’s utter
nonsense. The most insidious thing about trickle-down economics isn’t believing
that if the rich get richer, it’s good for the economy. It’s believing that if
the poor get richer, it’s bad for the economy.
I know that virtually all of you feel that compelling
our businesses to pay workers more is somehow unfair, or is too much government
interference. Most of you think that we should just let good examples like
Costco or Gap lead the way. Or let the market set the price. But here’s the
thing. When those who set bad examples, like the owners of Wal-Mart or
McDonald’s, pay their workers close to the minimum wage, what they’re really
saying is that they’d pay even less if it weren’t illegal. (Thankfully both
companies have recently said they would not oppose a hike in the minimum wage.)
In any large group, some people absolutely will not do the right thing. That’s
why our economy can only be safe and effective if it is governed by the same
kinds of rules as, say, the transportation system, with its speed limits and
stop signs.
Wal-Mart is our nation’s largest employer with some
1.4 million employees in the United States and more than $25 billion in pre-tax
profit. So why are Wal-Mart employees the largest group
of Medicaid recipients in many states? Wal-Mart could, say, pay each of its 1
million lowest-paid workers an extra $10,000 per year, raise them all out of
poverty and enable them to, of all things, afford to shop at Wal-Mart. Not only
would this also save us all the expense of the food stamps, Medicaid and rent
assistance that they currently require, but Wal-Mart would still earn more than
$15 billion pre-tax per year. Wal-Mart won’t (and shouldn’t) volunteer
to pay its workers more than their competitors. In order for us to have an
economy that works for everyone, we should compel all retailers to pay living
wages—not just ask politely.
We rich people have been falsely persuaded by our
schooling and the affirmation of society, and have convinced ourselves, that we
are the main job creators. It’s simply not true. There can never be enough
super-rich Americans to power a great economy. I earn about 1,000 times the
median American annually, but I don’t buy thousands of times more stuff. My
family purchased three cars over the past few years, not 3,000. I buy a few
pairs of pants and a few shirts a year, just like most American men. I bought
two pairs of the fancy wool pants I am wearing as I write, what my partner Mike
calls my “manager pants.” I guess I could have bought 1,000 pairs. But why
would I? Instead, I sock my extra money away in savings, where it doesn’t do
the country much good.
So forget all that rhetoric about how America is
great because of people like you and me and Steve Jobs. You know the truth even
if you won’t admit it: If any of us had been born in Somalia or the Congo, all
we’d be is some guy standing barefoot next to a dirt road selling fruit. It’s
not that Somalia and Congo don’t have good entrepreneurs. It’s just that the
best ones are selling their wares off crates by the side of the road because
that’s all their customers can afford.
So why not talk about a different kind of New Deal
for the American people, one that could appeal to the right as well as left—to
libertarians as well as liberals? First, I’d ask my Republican friends to get
real about reducing the size of government. Yes, yes and yes, you guys are all
correct: The federal government is too big in some ways. But no way can you cut
government substantially, not the way things are now. Ronald Reagan and George
W. Bush each had eight years to do it, and they failed miserably.
Republicans and Democrats in Congress can’t shrink
government with wishful thinking. The only way to slash government for real is
to go back to basic economic principles: You have to reduce the demand for
government. If people are getting $15 an hour or more, they don’t need food
stamps. They don’t need rent assistance. They don’t need you and me to pay for
their medical care. If the consumer middle class is back, buying and shopping,
then it stands to reason you won’t need as large a welfare state. And at the
same time, revenues from payroll and sales taxes would rise, reducing the
deficit.
This is, in other words, an economic approach that
can unite left and right. Perhaps that’s one reason the right is beginning,
inexorably, to wake up to this reality as well. Even Republicans as diverse as
Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum recently came out in favor of raising the minimum
wage, in defiance of the Republicans in Congress.
One thing we can agree on—I’m sure of this—is that
the change isn’t going to start in Washington. Thinking is stale, arguments
even more so. On both sides.
But the way I see it, that’s all right. Most major
social movements have seen their earliest victories at the state and municipal
levels. The fight over the eight-hour workday, which ended in Washington, D.C.,
in 1938, began in places like Illinois and Massachusetts in the late 1800s. The
movement for social security began in California in the 1930s. Even the
Affordable Health Care Act—Obamacare—would have been hard to imagine without
Mitt Romney’s model in Massachusetts to lead the way.
Sadly, no Republicans and few Democrats get this.
President Obama doesn’t seem to either, though his heart is in the right place.
In his State of the Union speech this year, he mentioned the need for a higher
minimum wage but failed to make the case that less inequality and a renewed
middle class would promote faster economic growth. Instead, the arguments we
hear from most Democrats are the same old social-justice claims. The only
reason to help workers is because we feel sorry for them. These fairness arguments
feed right into every stereotype of Obama and the Democrats as bleeding hearts.
Republicans say growth. Democrats say fairness—and lose every time.
But just because the two parties in Washington
haven’t figured it out yet doesn’t mean we rich folks can just keep going. The
conversation is already changing, even if the billionaires aren’t onto it. I
know what you think: You think that Occupy Wall Street and all the other
capitalism-is-the-problem protesters disappeared without a trace. But that’s not
true. Of course, it’s hard to get people to sleep in a park in the cause of
social justice. But the protests we had in the wake of the 2008 financial
crisis really did help to change the debate in this country from death panels
and debt ceilings to inequality.
It’s just that so many of you plutocrats didn’t get
the message.
Dear 1%ers, many of our fellow citizens are starting
to believe that capitalism itself is the problem. I disagree, and I’m sure you
do too. Capitalism, when well managed, is the greatest
social technology ever invented to create prosperity in human societies. But
capitalism left unchecked tends toward concentration and collapse. It can be
managed either to benefit the few in the near term or the many in the long
term. The work of democracies is to bend it to the latter. That is why
investments in the middle class work. And tax breaks for rich people like us
don’t. Balancing
the power of workers and billionaires by raising the minimum wage isn’t bad for capitalism. It’s an indispensable tool
smart capitalists use to make capitalism stable and sustainable. And no one has a bigger stake in that than
zillionaires like us.
The oldest and most important conflict in human
societies is the battle over the concentration of wealth and power. The folks
like us at the top have always told those at the bottom that our respective
positions are righteous and good for all. Historically, we called that divine
right. Today we have trickle-down economics.
What nonsense this is. Am I really such a superior
person? Do I belong at the center of the moral as well as economic universe? Do
you?
My family, the Hanauers, started in Germany selling
feathers and pillows. They got chased out of Germany by Hitler and ended up in
Seattle owning another pillow company. Three generations later, I benefited
from that. Then I got as lucky as a person could possibly get in the Internet
age by having a buddy in Seattle named Bezos. I look at the average Joe on the
street, and I say, “There but for the grace of Jeff go I.” Even the best of us,
in the worst of circumstances, are barefoot, standing by a dirt road, selling
fruit. We should never forget that, or forget that the United States of America
and its middle class made us, rather than the other way around.
Or we could sit back, do nothing, enjoy our yachts.
And wait for the pitchforks.
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