The Price of Inequality
Joseph E. Stiglitz
Nowadays,
these numbers show that the American dream is a myth. There is less
equality of opportunity in the United States today than there is in
Europe – or, indeed, in any advanced industrial country for which there
are data.
This
is one of the reasons that America has the highest level of inequality
of any of the advanced countries – and its gap with the rest has been
widening. In the “recovery” of 2009-2010, the top 1% of US income
earners captured 93% of the income growth. Other inequality indicators
– like wealth, health, and life expectancy – are as bad or even worse.
The clear trend is one of concentration of income and wealth at the top,
the hollowing out of the middle, and increasing poverty at the bottom.
It
would be one thing if the high incomes of those at the top were the
result of greater contributions to society, but the Great Recession
showed otherwise: even bankers who had led the global economy, as well
as their own firms, to the brink of ruin, received outsize bonuses.
A
closer look at those at the top reveals a disproportionate role for
rent-seeking: some have obtained their wealth by exercising monopoly
power; others are CEOs who have taken advantage of deficiencies in
corporate governance to extract for themselves an excessive share of
corporate earnings; and still others have used political connections to
benefit from government munificence – either excessively high prices for
what the government buys (drugs), or excessively low prices for what
the government sells (mineral rights).
Likewise,
part of the wealth of those in finance comes from exploiting the poor,
through predatory lending and abusive credit-card practices. Those at
the top, in such cases, are enriched at the direct expense of those at
the bottom.
It
might not be so bad if there were even a grain of truth to trickle-down
economics – the quaint notion that everyone benefits from enriching
those at the top. But most Americans today are worse off – with lower
real (inflation-adjusted) incomes – than they were in 1997, a decade and
a half ago. All of the benefits of growth have gone to the top.
Defenders
of America’s inequality argue that the poor and those in the middle
shouldn’t complain. While they may be getting a smaller share of the pie
than they did in the past, the pie is growing so much, thanks to the
contributions of the rich and superrich, that the size of their
slice is actually larger. The evidence, again, flatly contradicts this.
Indeed, America grew far faster in the decades after World War II, when
it was growing together, than it has since 1980, when it began growing
apart.
This
shouldn’t come as a surprise, once one understands the sources of
inequality. Rent-seeking distorts the economy. Market forces, of course,
play a role, too, but markets are shaped by politics; and, in America,
with its quasi-corrupt system of campaign finance and its revolving
doors between government and industry, politics is shaped by money.
For
example, a bankruptcy law that privileges derivatives over all else,
but does not allow the discharge of student debt, no matter how
inadequate the education provided, enriches bankers and impoverishes
many at the bottom. In a country where money trumps democracy, such
legislation has become predictably frequent.
But
growing inequality is not inevitable. There are market economies that
are doing better, both in terms of both GDP growth and rising living
standards for most citizens. Some are even reducing inequalities.
America
is paying a high price for continuing in the opposite direction.
Inequality leads to lower growth and less efficiency. Lack of
opportunity means that its most valuable asset – its people – is not
being fully used. Many at the bottom, or even in the middle, are not
living up to their potential, because the rich, needing few public
services and worried that a strong government might redistribute income,
use their political influence to cut taxes and curtail government
spending. This leads to underinvestment in infrastructure, education,
and technology, impeding the engines of growth.
The
Great Recession has exacerbated inequality, with cutbacks in basic
social expenditures and with high unemployment putting downward pressure
on wages. Moreover, the United Nations Commission of Experts on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System,
investigating the causes of the Great Recession, and the International
Monetary Fund have both warned that inequality leads to economic
instability.
But,
most importantly, America’s inequality is undermining its values and
identity. With inequality reaching such extremes, it is not surprising
that its effects are manifest in every public decision, from the conduct
of monetary policy to budgetary allocations. America has become a
country not “with justice for all,” but rather with favoritism for the
rich and justice for those who can afford it – so evident in the
foreclosure crisis, in which the big banks believed that they were too
big not only to fail, but also to be held accountable.
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