A booming US economy has led to an explosion in the ranks of the wealthy unseen in a century, creating a surging market for luxury goods as well as a new era of philanthropy, researchers said.
But some analysts say that the growing ranks of the rich comes at a time of a widening gap with the poor and highlights dilemmas on social issues such as the minimum wage, executive pay and taxes.
Forbes magazine said the US was home to at least 400 billionaires last year. Market research firm TNS concluded in 2005 that at least 8.9 million US households were worth at least US$1 million.
This has led to a sizzling market for luxury cars like Maseratis and Porsches, as well as strong sales of yachts and luxury homes.
At the same time, some researchers point to a widening rich-poor gap, a topic of heated debate.
Steven Lagerfeld, editor of the Wilson Quarterly of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, wrote that Americans' "enthusiastic embrace of business and the rich represents an amazing change in public attitudes."
"In the 1960s and [1970s], business was deeply unpopular and corporations were thought to embody the soul-deadening conformity and materialism of American society," he said.
Lagerfeld said the economic turmoil of the 1970s led to a tax-cut movement embraced by US president Ronald Reagan and "a renewed appreciation of the fragility of the nation's extraordinary wealth and the capitalist processes that create it."
But he said there are signs "that the public's ardor for the new era of riches is flagging."
Some data indicate a wealth gap that is the steepest in decades.
Emmanuel Saez, a French economist at the University of California at Berkeley, concluded that the top 1 percent of US households increased its share of overall national income from 8 percent in 1980 to 16 percent in 2004, the highest since before World War II.
But senior fellow Alan Reynolds of the libertarian Cato Institute said the research was flawed and that the income inequality since the 1970s can be traced to tax rules and tax reporting.
Reynolds said that the top 1 percent's share of income rose from 9.1 percent in 1985 to 13.2 percent in 1988 after the top tax rate fell from 50 percent to 28 percent.
Gary Burtless, economist at the Brookings Institution, said rising income inequality since the 1980s can be seen in tax data, census reports and many other sources.
But he said that the new rich class resulted from wealth creation that is in many cases beneficial to the economy as a whole.
"I think it's a good thing that Bill Gates worked hard" to create and expand Microsoft, Burtless said.
The US tax system "encourages people to exert greater energy to make more money ... This has pushed people with a great deal of talent and wealth-making capacity to work harder," he added.
One positive aspect of the wealth boom has been a surge in philanthropy, similar to that undertaken by the Fords, Carnegies and Rockefellers decades earlier.
Aside from the multibillion-dollar programs launched by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, at least a dozen groups received pledges of US$100 million or more last year, said Leslie Lenkowsky of the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University.
"Approximately two-thirds of all [charitable] giving today comes from the most affluent three percent of American households," Lenkowsky wrote in the Wilson Quarterly.
Still, many Americans are unsettled by the rise in new wealth.
US corporate chief executives were paid on average 262 times the salary of an average worker last year, an imbalance near an all-time high, the labor-oriented Economic Policy Institute said.
Representative Barney Frank said part of the Democratic Party agenda will include legislation to boost minimum wages and constrain CEO pay by requiring shareholders to approve exceptional compensation packages.
Frank said the philosophy of "a rising tide lifts all boats" may not be the best analogy.
"The rising tide is a very good idea if you have a boat," Frank said. "But if you are too poor to afford a boat and you are standing tiptoe in the water, the rising tide goes up your nose."
"The most worrying aspect of this is the implications for government and the distribution of political power," Burtless said. If the wealthy exercise too much control over power, he said, "the government itself will lose some of its legitimacy."
Lagerfeld said the period is reminiscent of a century ago, when a populist movement helped impose the first US income tax, securities markets regulation and other reforms in response to an unprecedented concentration of wealth in the new industrial "gilded age."
Still, Lagerfeld said he does not expect a return to a "soak the rich philosophy" of public policy.
"People are very reluctant to kill the goose that laid the golden egg," he said.
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