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Sherman A1

(38,958 posts)
Sun Oct 12, 2014, 06:00 PM Oct 2014

Economists’ long-held beliefs make income inequality worse

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/10/11/income-inequality-made-worse-economists-long-held-beliefs/P9hHPQ9L4kU0HNOAKxgdlK/story.html

Though many economists today are sounding the alarm over rising income inequality, one culprit somehow has been overlooked: their own wage theory.

Wage theory — one of the sacred truths of modern economics — suggests that competitive labor markets are self-regulating. Each worker is paid his or her productive worth. Unions, minimum wages, or any other interference — all just cause unemployment. Nearly all contemporary public policy is dictated by some version of this theory, but it simply no longer holds up.

Adam Smith, often called the father of classical economics, told a very different story. Smith believed that each society sets a living wage to cover “whatever the custom of the country renders it indecent for creditable people, even of the lowest order, to be without.” His successor David Ricardo similarly saw the “habits and customs of the people” as determining how to divide income between profits and wages. Marx’s class struggle was just a more confrontational version of the idea.

Around the turn of the 20th century, economists grew dissatisfied with this squishy sociologist’s answer, and some found it morally problematic. “The indictment that hangs over society is that of ‘exploiting labor,’” conceded John Bates Clark, a founder of the American Economic Association. He set out to disprove it.
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Economists’ long-held beliefs make income inequality worse (Original Post) Sherman A1 Oct 2014 OP
I have wondered about the abilities of economists since Texas A&M economics professor Phil Gramm Thinkingabout Oct 2014 #1
Did you stop listening to doctors when tobacco companies paid some of them to say smoking was safe? Taitertots Oct 2014 #4
Good article daleo Oct 2014 #2
Adam Smith is to economists as Jesus is to evangelical Christians. Marr Oct 2014 #3
Exactly. jwirr Oct 2014 #5

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
1. I have wondered about the abilities of economists since Texas A&M economics professor Phil Gramm
Sun Oct 12, 2014, 06:08 PM
Oct 2014

Declared if we would just deregulate the banks, etc "Everything will just be fine". They voted to repeal Glass-Stegall and replaced it with Gramm's bill and guess what, it wasn't fine, they had to have tax payer help to get out of the ditch. Now when I hear "economists" talking I start running for cover.

 

Taitertots

(7,745 posts)
4. Did you stop listening to doctors when tobacco companies paid some of them to say smoking was safe?
Sun Oct 12, 2014, 06:23 PM
Oct 2014

Why would you stop listening to economists after some of them were paid to support lies?

 

Marr

(20,317 posts)
3. Adam Smith is to economists as Jesus is to evangelical Christians.
Sun Oct 12, 2014, 06:19 PM
Oct 2014

They like to mention him a lot, but they don't actually read his stuff.

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