http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/business/2014/12/14/the-devalued-american-worker/
There's more wealth and income being generated then ever before but the majority of worker's are working much more just trying to tread water and remain where worker's were 30+ years ago.
Green’s state job pays about $12 an hour. His sports jobs pay about $9 an hour, which is decent money for anyone who works at a minor-league or college stadium. Green’s wife works full time as a social worker for a small salary. Between them, they clock between 110 and 120 hours a week on average. All those hours allow them to earn what a typical American family earned 25 years ago, after adjusting for inflation.
The average two-parent American family earned 23 percent more in 2009 than it did in 1973, after adjusting for inflation. That’s because people in those families are working more hours — 26 percent more than in 1973 on average. Take away the extra time on the job and wages haven’t gone up at all for the median family in more than 40 years, even though workers have grown more productive.
There's more wealth and income being generated then ever before but the majority of worker's are working much more just trying to tread water and remain where worker's were 30+ years ago.