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Jesse
Love
Celestopea Times Editorial Columnist
Quality of Life
In this season
of bare-knuckled politics, issues that affect the quality of
peoples’ everyday lives seem to get lost in the barrage of
character assassination by the candidates and their surrogates.
That’s too bad, because unverifiable questions about their
military service actions during the Viet Nam war and other
irrelevant innuendos about the distant past have little bearing on
the men they are today, or the choices either will make that will
affect all of us if they are elected to office. What I’d
rather know Mr. Candidate, is what you are going to do to improve
the quality of my life?
That our
quality of life as Americans may not be all it could be was
brought home to me this summer when my son, (who has dual
citizenship) visited from France. I was somewhat dumbfounded
when he explained why he had chosen to go to school in
France
rather than the USA.
“Well Pop”, he
said, “In France, tuition and books for the years you are in
school pursuing your bachelor degree, are free for all students.
Plus the government pays 90% of your rent so my $500.00 apartment
only costs me $50.00.”
Wow! How
many financially struggling American students, or
would-be-students who will never go to college because they can’t
afford it, would love a deal like that! I couldn’t argue
with that reasoning as attending school in the USA would mean a
financial sacrifice for all of us and would require my son to take
a part-time job to help pay his expenses, giving him less time to
study and do well at the University.
“Another
thing”, he added, “What happens to me if I need medical or dental
work?” He went on to explain, “In the USA, I’d have to buy
insurance and even for students it is very expensive. In
France,
medical and dental costs are partially paid by Social Security.”
I thought I had
him now. “Hold on, you’re not 65 years old, what does Social
Security have to do with anything?”
He patiently
explained, “In the USA, a worker pays a little over 7% of his
gross income to Social Security. However, except in very
unusual circumstances he cannot draw any benefits until he
retires. The age for that has just been raised in the USA to
68. In France, I have to pay 10% of my gross income to
Social Security, but I can draw on it all of my life to help pay
for medical and dental expenses and other things like greatly
extended unemployment compensation if I ever need it.”
“See these
teeth”, he said flashing a big smile, “It cost $8,000.00 to get my
teeth fixed. I paid $4,000.00 and Social Security paid the
other 50%.”
“And when’s the
last time you took a long paid vacation Pop?” he queried.
“Truth be known
son, I have never had a paid vacation,” I replied.
“I know”, he
consoled, patting me on the shoulder, “But I came to visit you
this summer with 5 weeks of paid vacation from my very first job.
That’s the minimum an employer can give to new employees. If
I went to a University in the USA, I’d be working somewhere like
McDonalds to help pay for school, I’d have to beg for a day off
and I certainly wouldn’t be getting 5 weeks paid vacation.”
Then he lightly
elbowed me in the ribs, “And did I forget to mention that after I
graduate and am in the workforce, the standard work week in France
is 35 hours and any additional hours are overtime?” “And
frankly Pop”, he continued, “people and governments in the
European Union, especially the countries of Western Europe, just
have a higher consciousness about maintaining a good quality of
life for all their people. For example, we have much
stricter environmental, food quality and energy efficiency
requirements than the USA.”
After this
conversation, I seriously had to do a more through investigation.
There were obvious quality of life differences between the USA and
France, but I was sure that France must be in debt up to their
ears to pay for those generous social services, low working hours
and long paid vacations.
I needed an
authoritative, indisputable information source to sort all this
out so I went to the CIA World Factbook, to compare populations
and 8 quality of life areas. Here’s the comparison in key
categories between the USA and France. If you look at the rest of
the countries of Western Europe you will find statistics similar
to or often better than Frances. Sweden for example, has a life
expectancy of 80.3 years, an infant mortality of only 2.77 / 1000,
Public Debt of 51.8% and zero
people living below poverty.
Here’s the
comparison in key categories between the
USA
and France. If you look at the rest of the countries of Western
Europe you will find statistics similar to or often better than
France's.
Sweden
for example, has a life expectancy of 80.3 years, an infant
mortality of only 2.77 / 1000, Public Debt of 51.8% and zero
people living below poverty.
|
Category |
USA |
France |
|
Population |
293,027,571 |
60,424,213 |
|
GDP (Gross Domestic Product) |
$10.98 Trillion |
$1.65 Trillion |
|
Public Debt |
62.4% of GDP |
68.80% |
|
Population Below Poverty |
12% |
6.50% |
|
Life Expectancy |
77.43 years |
79.44 |
|
Infant Mortality |
6.63 / 1,000 |
4.31 / 1,000 |
|
Literacy |
97% |
99% |
|
Military Expenditures |
$370 Billion |
$45 Billion |
|
Military Expenditures |
3.30% |
2.60% |
|
% of GDP |
|
|
Some quick
conclusions from this data and the facts I learned from my son:
1. The
USA
is a far richer country. If you divide the GDP by the population,
we see that each American worker produces substantially more
wealth than each French worker but that would be obvious as they
work longer hours and take fewer vacations. However, for all of
its’ wealth, the USA shamefully has over 12% of its population
subsisting below the poverty level compared to Frances 6.5% and
Sweden’s 0%.
2.
France
has a more extensive social network that produces greater life
benefits for their citizens. As evidence we see they have a
higher literacy rate, nearly half the percentage of people living
below the poverty level, a longer life expectancy and a
significantly lower infant mortality rate.
3.
France
is a bit more in debt than the USA, but not much more. France
carries a debt that is 68.8% of the GDP while the
USA’s
is 62.4%.
4. Americans
spend 27% more on their military than the French do on theirs as a
percentage of the GDP. Before I did the research, I was sure I
would be able to jump on military expenditures as one of the
problems, but as a percentage of the total GDP and in relationship
to other countries, military spending is not that significant.
So now I had to
admit that I just didn’t get it. How can the American workers
produce more money, making the USA GDP the highest in the world by
far, but have so much less to show for it? Where is all the money
going? Then I read this little footnote by the CIA concerning the
United States that stated that since 1975 nearly all gains
in household income have gone to the top 20% of households!
In other words, the rich have gotten richer but everyone else has
treaded water at best, for the last 30 years.
Forbes Magazine
just came out with their current list of the 400 wealthiest
Americans. Like previous recent years, Bill Gates of Microsoft
was number one with $48 Billion dollars. The top three Microsoft
moguls Gates, Allen and Ballmer are worth a combined $81 Billion.
It was also interesting that Sam Walton’s five Wal-Mart heirs
occupy five positions in the top ten, with a combined net worth of
almost $100 Billion dollars. Almost everyone on the list is a
billionaire and the combined wealth of the 400 individuals is over
$1 Trillion dollars. The entire GDP of the United States is a
little less than $11 Trillion dollars, so the personal wealth of
these 400 individuals is about equivalent to 10% of the entire
annually generated wealth of the other 293,000,000 citizens of the
USA.
From another perspective the richest 400 Americans are worth
more than the annual GDP of the entire country of
Canada.
A quick search
of Forbes list of the wealthiest French citizens shows the richest
is Liliane Bettencourt of L’Oreal with a $19 Billion dollar net
worth. After Ms.
Bettencourt,
France boasts
only ten other billionaires and the combined net worth of all
eleven is far less than the combined wealth of just the top two US
billionaires, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett.
How much money
can one person or even one family spend? If you take an average
50 year old, American Billionaire, with just $3 Billion dollars,
who lives to age 80, without making another nickel, he/she could
spend $1,000,000.00 every week and still have well over $1 Billion
dollars remaining when they died. If you had 30 years and needed
to spend $1,000,000.00 each week could you find a way to do it? I
don’t know. Even if you shopped till you dropped every single day
of your life and added three or four new mansions every year, it
would be a challenge for one person or even extended family to
spend that much.
The more
poignant question is, why is so much of the money generated in the
USA concentrated in the hands of so few people to the point of
such lavish extravagance that they can never even make a dent in
trying to spend it? Western European countries are able to offer
all of their citizens a higher quality of life than their
counterparts in America simply because their greater requirements
for employers to provide employees a higher standard of living
means the top stockholders get a little less while the rank and
file employees that make everything work get a little more. And
Europe’s greater social security and corporate taxes mean the rich
aren’t quite as rich but also insure a strong social safety net
for all citizens built upon a firm foundation of top education,
subsidized health care and stringent, comprehensive environmental
regulations.
As my son later
elaborated, “living in Europe with all of its safeguards for
citizens and help for students, simply gives you a tranquility and
peace of mind that allows you to be more productive at work, more
intent at school and more relaxed at home.”
Can America
take a lesson from Europe? Sam Walton was famous for his
unimposing ways, including still driving around in an old pickup
truck but are his five $100 Billion heirs proportionately so much
greater contributors to Wal-Mart operations than the 1,500,000
employees? The savvy and vision of Bill Gates certainly was
important to Microsoft’s phenomenal growth and many of their
employees have been well compensated, but without the people who
buy Microsoft products, the founder’s pockets would be empty.
Perhaps sharing a little more of the wealth would help millions of
people have a better life instead of just a handful.
The argument
that American companies cannot give their employees better wages
or benefits because it would make them non-competitive with other
companies and multinational corporations simply doesn’t hold
water. For many years European corporations and countries have
been giving their citizens better health care, higher quality and
better access to education, enforcing more stringent environmental
standards and offering shorter work weeks and longer paid
vacations. Even with all the perks many Western European
countries carry less debt than the USA and it hasn’t diminished
their ability to compete with the United States in the world
economic arena. For example, Airbus of France recently surpassed
Boeing as the number one airplane manufacturer in the world. Nor
have slightly higher taxes stifled innovation and entrepreneurial
efforts as is evidenced by French inventor Guy Negre’s recent
unveiling of the revolutionary new car that uses no fuel and runs
on compressed air. (See September 2004 issue of Celestopea Times).
America has
always had the resources, moral fiber, innovation, compassion and
worker productivity to be the greatest country in the world, a
land of wonder for all of its citizens. Isn’t it time to fulfill
the potential? |