Please Excuse This Interruption of Your Gun Porn

I thought this was a interesting piece about rising inequality, not just here but worldwide. I copied a portion of it but there is much more you have to go to the link at the end.

We now return to your regularly scheduled gun porn.

The Smartphone Have-Nots
By ADAM DAVIDSON
Earlier this month, Larry Mishel, the president of the Economic Policy Institute, stood at a lectern in a small hotel conference room in San Diego and fiddled with a computer until his PowerPoint presentation flashed on the screen. Mishel then composed himself, paid tribute to his intellectual opponent sitting in the front row and began a speech that, he hopes, will reorient the U.S. economy away from the 1 percent or the 0.1 percent and toward the rest of us.

Mishel’s session at this year’s meeting of the American Economic Association, titled “Inequality in America,” tellingly coincided with other sessions called “Extreme Wage Inequality” and “Taxes, Transfers and Inequality.” As the financial crisis wanes, economists are shifting their attention toward a more subtle, possibly more upsetting crisis in the United States: the significant increase in income inequality.

Much of what we consider the American way of life is rooted in the period of remarkably broad, shared economic growth, from around 1900 to about 1978. Back then, each generation of Americans did better than the one that preceded it. Even those who lived through the Depression made up what was lost. By the 1950s, America had entered an era that economists call the Great Compression, in which workers — through unions and Social Security, among other factors — captured a solid share of the economy’s growth.

These days, there’s a lot of disagreement about what actually happened during these years. Was it a golden age in which the U.S. government guided an economy toward fairness? Or was it a period defined by high taxes (until the early ’60s, the top marginal tax rate was 90 percent) and bureaucratic meddling? Either way, the Great Compression gave way to a Great Divergence. Since 1979, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the bottom 80 percent of American families had their share of the country’s income fall, while the top 20 percent had modest gains. Of course, the top 1 percent — and, more so, the top 0.1 percent — has seen income rise stratospherically. That tiny elite takes in nearly a quarter of the nation’s income and controls nearly half its wealth.

The standard explanation of this unhinging, repeated in graduate-school classrooms and in advice to politicians, is technological change. The rise of networked laptops and smartphones and their countless iterations and spawn have helped highly educated professionals create more and more value just as they have created barriers to entry and rendered irrelevant millions of less-educated workers, in places like factory production lines and typing pools. This explanation, known as skill-biased technical change, is so common that economists just call it S.B.T.C. They use it to explain why everyone from the extremely rich to the just-kind-of rich are doing so much better than everyone else.

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The gap just keeps getting wider, every year, every decade. The "working poor" should not even be a term that anyone uses.

And this is just part of the problem, but anyone who opposes the inheritance tax is bats.
 
The gap just keeps getting wider, every year, every decade. The "working poor" should not even be a term that anyone uses.

And this is just part of the problem, but anyone who opposes the inheritance tax is bats.

Is the argument that if not for the inheritance tax inequality would be worse today than it already is?
 
The gap just keeps getting wider, every year, every decade. The "working poor" should not even be a term that anyone uses.

And this is just part of the problem, but anyone who opposes the inheritance tax is bats.

They are losing ground as well because of education opportunities, like the article stated. The US experienced it's economic boon because we believed in public education as a priority. Think of what the GI bill did for the US after WWII
 
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Which is why we need to expand opportunities for students. Not to oversimplify the issue, but the cost education is one of the major enforcers of class disparity - we as a country desperately need European style free higher education.

indicators_fig3.jpg

http://cadmusjournal.org/article/is...-progress-power-measurement-and-human-welfare

Education.png

http://www.belowyourmeans.com/2011/05/education-the-next-bubble-to-pop.html
 
In many cases medical care in the last few years of life erases most of what wealth the working poor had built up during their lives.
Nothing to inherit.
 
You also have to do it 5 years for so ahead of time.

And today most youngsters blow what their parents worked a lifetime for in a few years.

Not a simple issue at all.

It is how I became finiancially comfortable.
The old man died, his son inherited some land that would VERY likely be very valuable within a year dur to a planned exit from a main highway. He wanted quick money, I borrowed to the hilt and bought cheap and sold within a year for over 10X profit.
He bought a new truck a new house a boat and lost his job a year later thru wild living (booze and drugs) lost his house and is now living in public housing.

I on the other hand have more than doubled the profit I made on the land sale.
 
You also have to do it 5 years for so ahead of time.

And today most youngsters blow what their parents worked a lifetime for in a few years.

Not a simple issue at all.

It is how I became finiancially comfortable.
The old man died, his son inherited some land that would VERY likely be very valuable within a year dur to a planned exit from a main highway. He wanted quick money, I borrowed to the hilt and bought cheap and sold within a year for over 10X profit.
He bought a new truck a new house a boat and lost his job a year later thru wild living (booze and drugs) lost his house and is now living in public housing.

LOL Wow!
 
Which is why we need to expand opportunities for students. Not to oversimplify the issue, but the cost education is one of the major enforcers of class disparity - we as a country desperately need European style free higher education.

indicators_fig3.jpg

http://cadmusjournal.org/article/is...-progress-power-measurement-and-human-welfare

Education.png

http://www.belowyourmeans.com/2011/05/education-the-next-bubble-to-pop.html
Think of doctors being on that chart
Increase access to medical schools and hc cost are solved
 
The whole system is really fixed in favor of the wealthy at this point. Education, healthcare, political influence - the working poor and middle class are losing ground at every turn.

There is an interesting sci-fi flick coming out this year called "Elysium" (love sci-fi), where the earth is almost uninhabitable and basically just made up of slums. The very wealthy have their own massive, luxury space station, and the rest live on an overpopulated, slummy planet. Pretty plausible future given the trends, imo.

Can't wait.
 
The whole system is really fixed in favor of the wealthy at this point. Education, healthcare, political influence - the working poor and middle class are losing ground at every turn.

There is an interesting sci-fi flick coming out this year called "Elysium" (love sci-fi), where the earth is almost uninhabitable and basically just made up of slums. The very wealthy have their own massive, luxury space station, and the rest live on an overpopulated, slummy planet. Pretty plausible future given the trends, imo.

Can't wait.

Very plausible, I will definitely go see that. Some people will get excited by the idea though. I bet SF just peed his pants when he read your post. Like WOW, I hope I live long enough!
 
The whole system is really fixed in favor of the wealthy at this point. Education, healthcare, political influence - the working poor and middle class are losing ground at every turn.

There is an interesting sci-fi flick coming out this year called "Elysium" (love sci-fi), where the earth is almost uninhabitable and basically just made up of slums. The very wealthy have their own massive, luxury space station, and the rest live on an overpopulated, slummy planet. Pretty plausible future given the trends, imo.

Can't wait.

And of course the space station is supported from the "slums" on the ground.

Space staion, castle, penthouse, temple, etc. It is an age old story.
 
Which is why we need to expand opportunities for students. Not to oversimplify the issue, but the cost education is one of the major enforcers of class disparity - we as a country desperately need European style free higher education.

http://www.belowyourmeans.com/2011/05/education-the-next-bubble-to-pop.html

that is what state university systems were supposed to provide... though they were low cost not free, they were still easily affordable until the past 15-20 years. There should be an in depth study as to why there is such a dramatic increase in costs per student. What is driving it?
 
True. You can get around that, but you have to know that, and then you have to have the money to hire the right people to do it.

the working poor are rarely going to accumulate anything to leave to kids. Hence the term working poor. Middle income and up obviously have an opportunity to pass it on.

If we are going to have an inheritance tax then a couple things should be done...

1) No one is exempt from it once a certain level is attained.
2) If you are going to leave a large portion of an estate to a charitable foundation, your kids don't get to work for it.
 
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