February 12th, 2008

I was a double major in university, psychology and computer science. Double majors weren't all that unusual, except that most doubles were in fields that had some class overlap, such as computer science and math. The only overlap I had in my two fields were statistics courses. I could take undergraduate and graduate level statistics classes in the psych department to meet a portion of my computer science math requirements.

There were only two of us signed up for graduate level statistics class, so the professor had us meet in his office. The statistics were so complicated, we had to use computers and software created in the days before "usability" was a criteria for all of our course work. I've since managed to forget most of my statistics training except for one valuable lesson: don't trust statistics. If you're determined, you can manipulate statistics to prove any point, regardless of how extreme.

A case in point is a New York Times op piece by two gentlemen, Michael Cox and Richard Alm, from the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas. According to their statistics, there really aren't two separate classes, rich and poor, in this country. In fact, the poor live a comparable lifestyle to the rich.

Income statistics, however, don’t tell the whole story of Americans’ living standards. Looking at a far more direct measure of American families’ economic status — household consumption — indicates that the gap between rich and poor is far less than most assume, and that the abstract, income-based way in which we measure the so-called poverty rate no longer applies to our society […] if we compare the incomes of the top and bottom fifths, we see a ratio of 15 to 1. If we turn to consumption, the gap declines to around 4 to 1. A similar narrowing takes place throughout all levels of income distribution. The middle 20 percent of families had incomes more than four times the bottom fifth. Yet their edge in consumption fell to about 2 to 1.

The data the authors use to perform their statistics is based on the fact that though rich people invest or bank their extra income, while poor families "magically" live beyond their means, they all "consume equally" and therefore are more equal than not.

Of course, Cox and Alm gloss over the fact that most poor people are overridden in debt, barely keeping ahead of bankruptcy in order to indulge in frivolous expenditures like medical treatment.

No, Aunt Sally has a 19 inch color TV in her mobile home while Aunt May has a 60 inch top of the line plasma TV in her pad overlooking Central Park, so there really is no difference between the two.

It’s true that the share of national income going to the richest 20 percent of households rose from 43.6 percent in 1975 to 49.6 percent in 2006, the most recent year for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics has complete data. Meanwhile, families in the lowest fifth saw their piece of the pie fall from 4.3 percent to 3.3 percent.

Income statistics, however, don’t tell the whole story of Americans’ living standards.

Speechless. I'm just…speechless…

update More from Paul Krugman and Dean Baker, especially in regards to flawed sampling forming the basis for the pretty charts.

update 2 Excellent commentary from The Big Picture, who focuses only on exposing the flaws in the statistics applied (because there's not enough time to expose all the other flaws in the writing).

Comments
1
Elaine - 11:10 am February 12, 2008

Paul Krugman had a little tidbit about that in his blog — among other things, apparently the study their piece is based on is missing some consumption growth among the affluent. (Having just read Richistan, I'll add: and how!)

I think everybody should take statistics. I took AP calculus, and calc II in college, but I've gotten more in my life out of looking over C's shoulder while he took stats when he went back to school. Incredibly illuminating…more than anything else, it helps you to ask good skeptical questions of what you read.

2
Loren - 1:16 pm February 12, 2008

I don't think it takes a statistics to blow that article away. All i have to to is look up the hill about a block where houses run half a million more than mine and realize we really aren't living the same life style.

Of course, if you drive another few miles, you'll notice that by their standards I probably seem rich.

I guess the "R" word is starting to worry Rich Republicans.

3
Jamie Pitts - 3:10 pm February 12, 2008

The Big Picture posted a very good criticism of the Op-Ed.

While we must recognize the dramatic drop in the cost of just about everything that is manufactured, we cannot ignore the recent rise in the cost of necessities (inflation) and the lack of a savings buffer that plagues so many people.

- Jamie

4
Michael R. Bernstein - 4:06 pm February 12, 2008

Drew Carey had some similar inanity with the same kind of selection bias on Reason.TV:
http://reason.tv/video/show/61.html

5
Shelley - 10:23 pm February 12, 2008

Elaine and Jamie, thanks for the additional links. Both were excellent.

Loren, I pass some of the poorest people in the country when I go into the Ozarks to hike. Mobile homes barely held together with rust, broken cars scattered about the yard. I read this op-ed and thought of those homes and wondered what world these two men live in. They live in Dallas — time for them to visit the Tex-Mex border if they want to see how the poor really live.

Michael, thanks for the link to the movie. I have a series of writings I'm working on for Burningbird (ala Loren's technique when he reviews books) inspired by the new book, "Against Happiness: In Praise of Melancholy". We're all Shiny, Happy People. Look! We drive SUVs!

6
Kia - 5:50 pm February 13, 2008

thank you for this peice. so true. statistics are much easier to manipulate for one's agenda than people… well, actually…

Thanks to all those who have contributed to the discussion. Comments are now closed, but you can contact the author of the post directly.