Atif Mian and Amir Sufi @ House of Debt:
If you must know only one fact about the U.S. economy, it should be this chart:
The chart shows that productivity, or output per hour of work, has
quadrupled since 1947 in the United States. This is a spectacular
achievement by an advanced economy.
The gains in productivity were quite widely shared from 1947 to 1980.
Real income for the median U.S. family doubled during this time just as
output per hour of work performed doubled. The rising tide was lifting
all boats.
(But there has been a) remarkable separation
in productivity and median real income since 1980. While the United
States is producing twice as much per hour of work today compared to
1980, a small part of the gain in real income has gone to the bottom
half of the income distribution. The gap between productivity and median
real income is at an historic all-time high today.
So where are all of the gains in productivity going? Two places:
First, owners of capital are getting a bigger share of GDP than
before. In other words, the share of profits has risen faster than
wages. Second, the highest paid workers are getting a bigger share of
the wages that go to labor.
The net result is that families at the higher end of the income
distribution have received more of the income produced by the economy
since the 1980s...
The widening gap between productivity and median income is a defining
issue of our time. It is not just about inequality – important as that
issue is. The widening gap between productivity and median income has
serious implications for macroeconomic stability and financial crises...
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