Saturday, March 14, 2026

Economic Dashboard Over 20 Years:Could Broad Based Capitalism Improve Innovative Developmentm, Community Resilience and Trust? (hypothetical Feather Party)

(Illustrative Only)

Grandpa Todd joined the
hypothetical Feather Party 
of independent voters because
he wants to protect rights,
pass on generational
American values,
resilience of communities,
and opportunities for the
younger generation which
may be dwindling. 
With so much money on top
it seems as though
some may have forgotten
why they were elected. 
New ideas are needed.

Shhh don't say
that too loudly as
you might go on a
partisan's list. There
may be reasons why
that is becoming more
common as well.
Freedom
of speech.🤫

Would a larger independent
party help reverse the trends?
Would it keep people a 
little more focused on
serving normal people if
leaders were drawn from
communities?

*the hypthothetical Feather
Party is a philosphical discussion,
doesn't exist at this time, 
is made of independent voters
that tip partyline votes, focuses
on the young generation, encourages
new ideas, seeks to
connect democracy to
communities, doesn't work
with special interest, limits
campaign donations, and each
member is encourage to vote
their conscious based on a
shared decision making matrix.
Some will support one thing
and others will support 
other things. A place
for intellectuals, logical thinkers,
scientists, and those who
want a shared sense of purpose.

There are several trends worth considering and thinking about from a philosphical perspective. Based on an initial review of available data and a brief check of sources, there may be areas where economic and political leadership could improve to help ensure the nation remains healthy and develop in ways that enhance the lives of average Americans.

It is important to note that the presence of trends does not imply causation. The information below would need to be thoroughly scrubbed, reviewed, and supported with deeper analysis to reach precise conclusions. However, from a high-level perspective, and given the variety of sources from which the information is drawn, the likelihood that these observations are at least broadly accurate appears reasonably strong.

Organizations must find solutions to problems and that starts with voting in the best and brightest and not the most partisan, special interest vetted or connected here or internationally. 

Philosophical Questions: 

1. Could broad basec capitalism improve economic performance and trust? 

2. If wealth is being concentrated is it possible that a broader based capitalism could help your communities rebuild?

Feel free to make your own conclusions as ultimatey each of us must be able to take in information and decide for ourselves. We don't need others tellings us what we need as we are an educated intelligent people. In earlier times when we all lived in a village and worked toward shared benefit we could not afford to not exlore adaptive ideas. Or rely on a few top down perspectives that impact all of us but haven't necessarily panned out well. Let us try bottom up management for a change. 🤷 Vote your conscious.

Several notable trends over the past 20 years include:

  • Increasing trade deficit

  • Rising concentration of wealth

  • Declining trust in government

  • Increasing mergers and acquisitions

  • Increasing perceptions of corruption

  • PACs on the rise

  • Growing ideological partisan voting

  • Declining economic freedom

  • Increasing movement of wealth overseas (..likely underreported due to private data.)

  • Rising national debt

  • Declining perceptions of freedom of speech

Broad-based capitalism, in theory, may help reverse some of these troubling trends. Maybe or maybe not? Achieving this may require a larger independent voting bloc that is less influenced by money in politics and the partisan ideologies often tied to that money. From a broad-based perspective, more wealth generation should occur within the hands of average Americans and within local communities.

Broad-based capitalism is closely related to broad-based capital markets, meaning a wider distribution of investors (i.e. small and medium) and capital across many industries and across firms of different sizes. i.e. the firms in your community. The concept focuses on maximizing market participation and wealth creation across the full spectrum of businesses, communities, from microenterprises to large corporations.

This approach could also influence innovation by engaging a broader base of human capital (See how the concepts are related to maximize benefit to the most amount of people? We cannot afford to leave any demographic behind.). Research has suggested that smaller firms often generate more innovation per employee than larger firms. (Small and Large Firm Innovation) We can tap that power to rebuild.

Encouraging wider participation in entrepreneurship and capital formation may therefore strengthen innovation across the economy. That could mean higher household income levels as decisions and income are closer to the people who earn it. Innovation in the development of human capital is especially important because, when widely distributed throughout society, it can create cascading “butterfly effects” that support long-term economic and social progress. In Theory.

Trade Deficit

Data Source U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

YearTrade Deficit
2005-$714B
2006-$762B
2007-$705B
2008-$709B
2009-$384B
2010-$495B
2011-$549B
2012-$537B
2013-$462B
2014-$490B
2015-$500B
2016-$502B
2017-$552B
2018-$621B
2019-$442B
2020-$982B
2021-$1.18T
2022-$1.31T
2023~-$1.18T
2024~-$903B
2025~$901B

Concentration of Wealth Top 1%

Federal Reserve Distributional Financial Accounts data

YearShare of Total U.S. Wealth Top 1%
200426.9%
200928.1%
201430.4%
201930.4%
202430.8%
2025~31%     

Trust in Government

Data Source Pew Research Center

Pew Research Center regularly asks whether people trust the government to do what is right “always or most of the time.”

Year% Trust Government
2004~36%
2010~24%
2015~19%
2019~17%
2021~24%
2024~22%
2025~17%

U.S. M&A Deals by Year

Dealogic/SIFMA and industry reports

Dealogic/SIFMA and industry reports.
YearNumber of Deals
20058,214
200610,265
200710,696
20089,067
20097,315
201010,148
201110,562
201212,228
201310,223
201410,632
201510,509
20169,774
201710,390
20188,327
20199,870
2020~11,000
2021~16,000
2022~17,000
202315,643
202413,697

Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) – United States (2001–2025)

Data Source

Scores are on a scale of 0 More Corruption –100 Less Corrupt. Data Source

YearCPI Score
200176
200277
200375
200470
200576
200673
200772
200870
200975
201071
201171
201273
201373
201474
201576
201674
201775
201871
201969
202067
202167
202269
202369
202465
202564 (latest)

Number of PACs in the U.S. by Year (1990–2024)

PACs counted include all federally registered committees making contributions to congressional candidates (i.e., connected, non‑connected, corporate, labor, etc.)this count does not include Super PACs and hybrid PACs separately, though some are included under nonconnected categories when they report. Data Source

YearTotal PACs Registered
19902,869
19923,067
19943,099
19964,518
19984,593
20004,496
20024,573
20044,864
20065,012
20085,220
20105,512
20127,311
20147,548
20168,666
20188,663
20208,855
20229,271
20249,233

Party Unity (Percent of Votes That Were Partisan) by Year


A general upward trend
Data Source 


2023-2025 appear to bump up completely but data seems incomplete and from other sources.


YearHouse (%)Senate (%)
2003~52~67
2004~47~52
2005~49~63
2006~54~57
2007~62~60
2008~53~52
2009~50~72
2010~40~79
2011~76~51
2012~73~60
2013~69~70
2014~73~67
2015~75~69
2016~73~46 (note: incomplete/estimated)
2017~76~69
2018~59~50
2019~68~54
2020~70~64
2021~63~79
2022~53~83


US Economic Freedom Score (approx. 2006–2026)

Heritage Foundation.
It
scores
countries
from
0–100
based
on
factors
like
property
rights,
government
size,
regulation,
trade
openness,
and
financial
freedom.


Data Source and Data Source

YearScoreGlobal RankCategory
2006~82~4Free
2010~78~9Mostly Free
2015~76~12Mostly Free
2018~75.7~18Mostly Free
2020~76.6~17Mostly Free
2021~74.8~20Mostly Free
2022~72.1~25Mostly Free
202370.625Mostly Free
2024~70.1~25Mostly Free
202570.226Mostly Free
202672.822Mostly Free

Estimated U.S. Personal Wealth Held Offshore (2005–2024)



Likely underestimated as information is private. It would be nice to see which countries that money is going and what their policies are that they attract this private capital. We might be able to retain that money here. 

(rounded estimates, trillions USD)
YearOffshore wealth
2005$0.9T
2006$1.0T
2007$1.06T
2008$1.1T
2009$1.2T
2010$1.4T
2011$1.6T
2012$1.8T
2013$2.0T
2014$2.2T
2015$2.5T
2016$2.8T
2017$3.1T
2018$4.0T
2019$4.1T
2020$4.0T
2021$4.1T
2022$4.2T
2023$4.2T
2024~$4.3T

U.S. Federal Budget Deficit by Fiscal Year (Approximate)


Data Source

(Figures are in billions or trillions of U.S. dollars (USD))

Fiscal Year (Oct–Sept)Federal Deficit
2005$318 B
2006$248 B
2007$161 B
2008$459 B
2009$1,413 B (~$1.4 T)
2010$1,294 B (~$1.3 T)
2011$1,300 B (~$1.3 T)
2012$1,077 B (~$1.1 T)
2013$680 B
2014$485 B
2015$442 B
2016$585 B
2017$665 B
2018$779 B
2019$984 B
2020$3,132 B (~$3.1 T) pandemic spike
2021$2,772 B (~$2.8 T)
2022$1,380 B (~$1.38 T)
2023$1,690 B (~$1.69 T)
2024$1,830 B (~$1.83 T)
2025$1,775–$1,780 B (~$1.78 T)
2026 (est.)~$1.55 T projected 

Freedom of Press/Speech



Scores: 0 = best, 100 = worst.
U.S. trends (approximate rank and score):
YearScoreRank (out of ~180)
200515.520
201017.222
201519.041
202023.344
202425.145



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