Paul Krugman, the "Liberal Conscience" animated by fairly conventional Keynsianism, further diminishes Our Mr. Brooks:
Many people in Washington, even those
willing to concede that inequality has been rising rapidly, are
uncomfortable talking about the famous 1 percent — perhaps because it
sounds too populist, too much like an invitation to crowds with
pitchforks. For a long time respectable discussion focused on the top 20
percent; today I see my colleague David Brooks
talking about the top 5 percent.
But framing the discussion in terms of some broader group is in this case deeply misleading. Here’s what the Piketty-Saez numbers tell us about the top 5 percent (incomes in 2012 dollars):
Piketty and Saez
If you look at the bottom 4 percent of the
top 5, you see good but not spectacular income gains. These are the
kinds of gains that you might be able to explain in terms of skills,
assortative mating, and so on. But the top 1 percent is in a different
universe altogether. And in fact the gains within the top 1 percent are
concentrated in an even smaller group: this is a Pareto distribution
thing, in which the higher the income the greater the percentage gains.
The point is that using wider definitions than the one percent is, in effect, diluting the
wolves of Wall Street by lumping them in with the upper middle class. Not the same story at all.
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