In 1979 Kreml's first book,
The Middle Class Burden, discussed the
vulnerability of the American middle class and predicted that it would begin to
suffer from corporate downsizing.
In the first seven chapters of this follow-up study, Kreml reiterates his
original predictions, arguing that a goodly part of the size of the middle
class was not a result of economic necessity for large private sector
bureaucracies such as banking, insurance and real estate. Instead, the
inflated size of the middle class was due to the fact that the American
political system - in concert with the American competitive and individualistic
ethic - needed the ratification of a majority of citizens. With this goal in
mind, corporations were encouraged to place large numbers of people into white
collar employment.
The last two chapters of America's Middle Class bring the first edition
up to date as Kreml shows how his first work was prophetic. He
explains that by the 1990's, important factors such as the computer age,
foreign competition, and the weakness of labor unions placed the middle class
in a far weaker position. In addition, the structure of the federal government,
particularly the Congress, became fragmented, increasing the number of
committees and subcommittees and allowing individuals within the government to
become entrepreneurial in their approach to politics. The fragmentation -
which Kreml refers to as "undemocratic decentralization" - meant that large
corporations could downsize without fear of political retribution, thus leading
to the abandonment of America's middle class.