The Wealth Gap or the National Debt: Which Is Worse for the Republic?
Two figures, fifty years apart, tell the story of an American republic that cannot bring itself to decide. The top one percent now holds 31.7 percent of household wealth — the highest concentration since records began in 1989. Federal debt has crossed 99 percent of GDP, on track to break the 1946 wartime record by 2030. The public debate sees one figure or the other; almost no one looks at them together. This essay does. It treats each pattern alone, then together, then renders a candid verdict — in three parts, because the question has three answers and the citizens of a republic are owed all of them. The closest historical analogue is not 1929. It is the Gilded Age proper, 1873 to 1893, when a republic ran two patterns at once until something forced an answer. The data is on the table. The levers are named. What has been deferred is what comes due.
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