Posted in Health Care, Inequality on May 10th, 2012
This new report is sure to result in a ramping up of coordinated efforts to reduce the obesity “epidemic.” (By the way, I always thought an epidemic was something that was contagious. Does my wife sitting on the couch this evening make me fat?). Too much in it to go point by point, so let’s […]
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Posted in Inequality on Feb 29th, 2012
My colleague Steve Landsburg made a great observation that the behavior of our current Presidential candidates indicates a rejection of the “Frankian” idea of the importance of relative measures of well-being. Do read it. But a terrific comment is down below: I’ll believe the relative income nonesense when someone shows me evidence that people leave […]
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End all public funding of higher education. I was going to post a long ditty on it, but I prefer to make bald proclamations today. Note of course that my proclamation is even stronger (tautological perhaps?) if we take a global view of justice rather than a US-centric view.
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Posted in Inequality on Jan 20th, 2012
Imagine a 20 person economy. In this economy, we can arrange all of the income earners from lowest-earning to highest earning in increments: Person 1 $10.00 Person 2 $10.50 Person 3 $11.03 Person 4 $11.58 Person 5 $12.16 Person 6 $12.76 Person 7 $13.40 Person 8 $14.07 Person 9 $14.77 Person 10 $15.51 Person 11 […]
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Just finished a book called Company Town: The Industrial Edens and Satanic Mills that Shaped the American Economy. I was uninspired by the book, but it did contain several interesting histories of companies such as Kohler, Hormel, Corning and Hershey that people may find useful. One theme that is woven throughout the book, but not […]
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Posted in Inequality on Sep 16th, 2011
Imagine that you are someone who is very concerned about high levels of income and consumption inequality. Furthermore suppose you believe that appropriate remedies to this, and also a matter of social justice, is to tax these people a lot more. How would your views change if all of these super-rich people were identical to […]
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Posted in Inequality on Sep 15th, 2011
Just a few days ago the US Census released its annual estimates of poverty counts in the United States, along with updates in various income measures. The data were not pretty. Poverty rates are at levels not seen in 20 years and it appears that the income of a typical household has not budged much […]
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Posted in Inequality, Methodology on Aug 4th, 2011
There are four broad classes of measures used to capture, via a simple summary statistic, what an income distribution “looks like” and how it changes. In a country of 310 million people it is easy to understand why we rely on such summary statistics. But as with all statistics, we ought to be very careful […]
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Posted in Inequality on Aug 2nd, 2011
In yesterday’s post, we showed how inequality in the U.S. has increased by 18% over the previous 40 years according to the most commonly cited measure of inequality, the Gini Coefficient. In tomorrow’s post what we’d like to see from an inequality statistic in an ideal world. Today, I wanted to illustrate how this measure […]
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Posted in Inequality on Aug 1st, 2011
The chart below depicts a measure known as the “Gini Coefficient” for the entire United States from 1967-2009: This is the image that people typically have in mind when they make claims that inequality in the United States is increasing. By this measure called the Gini Coefficient, it appears that income inequality increased by about […]
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