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Showing Original Post only (View all)The 1 Percent’s Problem - Joseph E. Stiglitz - VanityFair [View all]
The 1 Percents ProblemWhy wont Americas 1 percentsuch as the six Walmart heirs, whose wealth equals that of the entire bottom 30 percentbe a bit more . . . selfish? As the widening financial divide cripples the U.S. economy, even those at the top will pay a steep price.
By Joseph E. Stiglitz - VanityFair
May 31, 2012
<snip>
Lets start by laying down the baseline premise: inequality in America has been widening for decades. Were all aware of the fact. Yes, there are some on the right who deny this reality, but serious analysts across the political spectrum take it for granted. I wont run through all the evidence here, except to say that the gap between the 1 percent and the 99 percent is vast when looked at in terms of annual income, and even vaster when looked at in terms of wealththat is, in terms of accumulated capital and other assets. Consider the Walton family: the six heirs to the Walmart empire possess a combined wealth of some $90 billion, which is equivalent to the wealth of the entire bottom 30 percent of U.S. society. (Many at the bottom have zero or negative net worth, especially after the housing debacle.) Warren Buffett put the matter correctly when he said, Theres been class warfare going on for the last 20 years and my class has won.
So, no: theres little debate over the basic fact of widening inequality. The debate is over its meaning. From the right, you sometimes hear the argument made that inequality is basically a good thing: as the rich increasingly benefit, so does everyone else. This argument is false: while the rich have been growing richer, most Americans (and not just those at the bottom) have been unable to maintain their standard of living, let alone to keep pace. A typical full-time male worker receives the same income today he did a third of a century ago.
From the left, meanwhile, the widening inequality often elicits an appeal for simple justice: why should so few have so much when so many have so little? Its not hard to see why, in a market-driven age where justice itself is a commodity to be bought and sold, some would dismiss that argument as the stuff of pious sentiment.
Put sentiment aside. There are good reasons why plutocrats should care about inequality anywayeven if theyre thinking only about themselves. The rich do not exist in a vacuum. They need a functioning society around them to sustain their position. Widely unequal societies do not function efficiently and their economies are neither stable nor sustainable. The evidence from history and from around the modern world is unequivocal: there comes a point when inequality spirals into economic dysfunction for the whole society, and when it does, even the rich pay a steep price.
Let me run through a few reasons why...
<snip>
Much More: http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/2012/05/joseph-stiglitz-the-price-on-inequality
32 replies
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LOL !!! - Well, Maybe... As Long As They Stay Nicely Imprisoned In Their Ivory Towers...
WillyT
May 2012
#6
Who would have ever guessed that someone with a Nobel Prize would know what he's talking about
Poiuyt
May 2012
#11
Agreed. Of course, the idea of shopping locally is to buy things produced locally.
JDPriestly
Jun 2012
#31
The fictions of Horatio Alger and Ayn Rand are more pervasive than any amount of rational argument
nxylas
Jun 2012
#21
Yet, the Waltons, the Kochs and even Mitt Romney inherited enough to give them
JDPriestly
Jun 2012
#26
they are global citizens. the crux of the problem is they don't care about America
magical thyme
Jun 2012
#29