http://fatasmihov.blogspot.com/2014/11/is-0-growth-for-90-successful-economic.html
Well? Is 0% economic growth for 90% of the population a successful economic model?
I would argue that it's not, that we can do better.
If you think it's just fine then what percentage of society needs to experience 0% growth for you to start thinking that, maybe, something should be changed?
http://www.businessinsider.com/95-o...the-top-1-heres-what-that-really-means-2013-9
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-10-02/top-1-got-93-of-income-growth-as-rich-poor-gap-widened.html
Here is how I try to challenge the thinking of my students when I discuss income inequality. We all agree that the current economic model has allowed the income of many Americans to increase at a rate close to 2% for more than a century based on continuous productive accumulation of capital and innovation, an amazing success. But how would we think about the same economic model if this rate of growth slowed down and was very close to 0%? This would represent a big change in the economic outcome and would, for sure, raise concerns about why the model is failing to deliver relative to our expectations (that is the argument we use to call alternative models, like those of planned economies, a failure).
While it is true that GDP per capita growth has remained in line with historical experience over the last decades, the income of a large % of US households has either stopped growing or is growing at a rate much closer to 0% than to 2%. So if 0% growth for 100% of the population would represent a failure, what about 0% growth for 90% of the population?
Well? Is 0% economic growth for 90% of the population a successful economic model?
I would argue that it's not, that we can do better.
If you think it's just fine then what percentage of society needs to experience 0% growth for you to start thinking that, maybe, something should be changed?
http://www.businessinsider.com/95-o...the-top-1-heres-what-that-really-means-2013-9
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-10-02/top-1-got-93-of-income-growth-as-rich-poor-gap-widened.html
