Joseph E. Stiglitz, former Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors and chief economist for the World Bank,
@ NYT:
The
re-election of President Obama was like a Rorschach test, subject to
many interpretations. In this election, each side debated issues that
deeply worry me: the long malaise into which the economy seems to be
settling, and the growing divide between the 1 percent and the rest - an
inequality not only of outcomes but also of opportunity. To me, these
problems are two sides of the same coin: with inequality at its highest
level since before the Depression, a robust recovery will be difficult
in the short term, and the American dream - a good life in exchange for
hard work - is slowly dying.
Politicians typically talk about
rising inequality and the sluggish recovery as separate phenomena, when
they are in fact intertwined. Inequality stifles, restrains and holds
back our growth. When even the free-market-oriented magazine The
Economist argues - as it did in a special feature in October - that the
magnitude and nature of the country's inequality represent a serious
threat to America, we should know that something has gone horribly
wrong. And yet, after four decades of widening inequality and the
greatest economic downturn since the Depression, we haven't done
anything about it.
There are four major reasons inequality is
squelching our recovery. The most immediate is that our middle class is
too weak to support the consumer spending that has historically driven
our economic growth. While the top 1 percent of income earners took home
93 percent of the growth in incomes in 2010, the households in the
middle - who are most likely to spend their incomes rather than save
them and who are, in a sense, the true job creators - have lower
household incomes, adjusted for inflation, than they did in 1996. The
growth in the decade before the crisis was unsustainable - it was
reliant on the bottom 80 percent consuming about 110 percent of their
income.
Second, the hollowing out of the middle class since the
1970s, a phenomenon interrupted only briefly in the 1990s, means that
they are unable to invest in their future, by educating themselves and
their children and by starting or improving businesses.
Third, the
weakness of the middle class is holding back tax receipts, especially
because those at the top are so adroit in avoiding taxes and in getting
Washington to give them tax breaks. The recent modest agreement to
restore Clinton-level marginal income-tax rates for individuals making
more than $400,000 and households making more than $450,000 did nothing
to change this. Returns from Wall Street speculation are taxed at a far
lower rate than other forms of income. Low tax receipts mean that the
government cannot make the vital investments in infrastructure,
education, research and health that are crucial for restoring long-term
economic strength.
Fourth, inequality is associated with more
frequent and more severe boom-and-bust cycles that make our economy more
volatile and vulnerable. Though inequality did not directly cause the
crisis, it is no coincidence that the 1920s - the last time inequality
of income and wealth in the United States was so high - ended with the
Great Crash and the Depression. The International Monetary Fund has
noted the systematic relationship between economic instability and
economic inequality, but American leaders haven't absorbed the lesson.
Our
skyrocketing inequality - so contrary to our meritocratic ideal of
America as a place where anyone with hard work and talent can "make it" -
means that those who are born to parents of limited means are likely
never to live up to their potential. Children in other rich countries
like Canada, France, Germany and Sweden have a better chance of doing
better than their parents did than American kids have. More than a fifth
of our children live in poverty - the second worst of all the advanced
economies, putting us behind countries like Bulgaria, Latvia and Greece.
Our
society is squandering its most valuable resource: our young. The dream
of a better life that attracted immigrants to our shores is being
crushed by an ever-widening chasm of income and wealth. Tocqueville, who
in the 1830s found the egalitarian impulse to be the essence of the
American character, is rolling in his grave.
Even were we able to
ignore the economic imperative of fixing our inequality problem, the
damage it is doing to our social fabric and political life should prompt
us to worry. Economic inequality leads to political inequality and a
broken decision-making process.
Despite Mr. Obama's stated
commitment to helping all Americans, the recession and the lingering
effects of the way it was handled have made matters much, much worse.
While bailout money poured into the banks in 2009, unemployment soared
to 10 percent that October. The rate today (7.8 percent) appears better
partly because so many people have dropped out of the labor force, or
never entered it, or accepted part-time jobs because there was no
full-time job for them.
High unemployment, of course, depresses
wages. Adjusted for inflation, real wages have stagnated or fallen; a
typical male worker's income in 2011 ($32,986) was lower than it was in
1968 ($33,880). Lower tax receipts, in turn, have forced state and local
cutbacks in services vital to those at the bottom and middle.
Most
Americans' most important asset is their home, and as home prices have
plummeted, so has household wealth - especially since so many had
borrowed so much on their homes. Large numbers are left with negative
net worth, and median household wealth fell nearly 40 percent, to
$77,300 in 2010 from $126,400 in 2007, and has rebounded only slightly.
Since the Great Recession, most of the increase in the nation's wealth
has gone to the very top.
Meanwhile, as incomes have stagnated or
fallen, tuition has soared. In the United States now, the principal way
to get education - the only sure way to move up - is to borrow. In 2010,
student debt, now $1 trillion, exceeded credit-card debt for the first
time.
Student debt can almost never be wiped out, even in
bankruptcy. A parent who co-signs a loan can't necessarily have the debt
discharged even if his child dies. The debt can't be discharged even if
the school - operated for profit and owned by exploitative financiers -
provided an inadequate education, enticed the student with misleading
promises, and failed to get her a decent job.
Instead of pouring
money into the banks, we could have tried rebuilding the economy from
the bottom up. We could have enabled homeowners who were "underwater" -
those who owe more money on their homes than the homes are worth - to
get a fresh start, by writing down principal, in exchange for giving
banks a share of the gains if and when home prices recovered.
We
could have recognized that when young people are jobless, their skills
atrophy. We could have made sure that every young person was either in
school, in a training program or on a job. Instead, we let youth
unemployment rise to twice the national average. The children of the
rich can stay in college or attend graduate school, without accumulating
enormous debt, or take unpaid internships to beef up their résumés. Not
so for those in the middle and bottom. We are sowing the seeds of ever
more inequality in the coming years.
The Obama administration does
not, of course, bear the sole blame. President George W. Bush's steep
tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 and his multitrillion-dollar wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan emptied the piggy bank while exacerbating the great divide.
His party's newfound commitment to fiscal discipline - in the form of
insisting on low taxes for the rich while slashing services for the poor
- is the height of hypocrisy.
There are all kinds of excuses for
inequality. Some say it's beyond our control, pointing to market forces
like globalization, trade liberalization, the technological revolution,
the "rise of the rest." Others assert that doing anything about it would
make us all worse off, by stifling our already sputtering economic
engine. These are self-serving, ignorant falsehoods.
Market forces
don't exist in a vacuum - we shape them. Other countries, like
fast-growing Brazil, have shaped them in ways that have lowered
inequality while creating more opportunity and higher growth. Countries
far poorer than ours have decided that all young people should have
access to food, education and health care so they can fulfill their
aspirations.
Our legal framework and the way we enforce it has
provided more scope here for abuses by the financial sector; for
perverse compensation for chief executives; for monopolies' ability to
take unjust advantage of their concentrated power.
Yes, the market
values some skills more highly than others, and those who have those
skills will do well. Yes, globalization and technological advances have
led to the loss of good manufacturing jobs, which are not likely ever to
come back. Global manufacturing employment is shrinking, simply because
of enormous increases in productivity, and America is likely to get a
shrinking share of the shrinking number of new jobs. If we do succeed in
"saving" these jobs, it may be only by converting higher-paid jobs to
lower-paid ones - hardly a long-term strategy.
Globalization, and
the unbalanced way it has been pursued, has shifted bargaining power
away from workers: firms can threaten to move elsewhere, especially when
tax laws treat such overseas investments so favorably. This in turn has
weakened unions, and though unions have sometimes been a source of
rigidity, the countries that responded most effectively to the global
financial crisis, like Germany and Sweden, have strong unions and strong
systems of social protection.
As Mr. Obama's second term begins,
we must all face the fact that our country cannot quickly, meaningfully
recover without policies that directly address inequality. What's needed
is a comprehensive response that should include, at least, significant
investments in education, a more progressive tax system and a tax on
financial speculation.
The good news is that our thinking has been
reframed: it used to be that we asked how much growth we would be
willing to sacrifice for a little more equality and opportunity. Now we
realize that we are paying a high price for our inequality and that
alleviating it and promoting growth are intertwined, complementary
goals. It will be up to all of us - our leaders included - to muster the
courage and foresight to finally treat this beleaguering malady.
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