Bryant wrote:CommanderOtto wrote:and I know it is very difficult for the eyes to read so much in such tiny letters (at least that's my case), but if you hold on a little more read this.. a quote from an article in The Economist (moderate conservative by the way, and even they admit the situation is bad):
Whatever its causes, the stratification of American society is having profound consequences. A country that prides itself on its social mobility is already less mobile than most people think and is almost certainly becoming even less so. As the box with the previous article showed, standard measures of inter-generational mobility in America are lower than in Canada and much of Europe. Most of this has to do with the difficulty of escaping from the bottom rungs of America’s income ladder. According to Markus Jantti, a Finnish economist who has studied mobility across countries, more than 40% of the sons of the poorest 20% of Americans stay in that quintile, compared with around 25% in Nordic countries. The evidence is mixed on whether social mobility has lessened or simply stayed the same over the past 30 years. But it is clear that there has been no improvement in mobility to compensate for widening inequality.
And even the most recent studies of social mobility look at the earnings of people who were children over two decades ago. Since disparities in income, education and social behaviour now strongly reinforce each other, future mobility might be a lot lower still. A study by Sean Reardon of Stanford University suggests that the gap in standardised test scores between schoolchildren from high- and low-income families is roughly 30-40% bigger today than it was 25 years ago. Bob Putnam, of Harvard University, puts it starkly. Put away the rear-view mirror and look at future social mobility, he says, and “we’re about to go over a cliff.”
The other side of the coin to mobility is motivation. There are many theories about the effects of the so called "welfare nation" on desire for social mobility. However, that is difficult to measure and difficult to come up with a humane solution. No
er what the reason, I do believe that we should be concerned about mobility (or the the more patriotic phrasing: "The American Dream"). I don't really have a solution by the way, but I would say the challenges are to let businesses feel that they are in a stable environment with respect to the government (ie no sudden drastic policy changes, that could otherwise keep them from expanding), that if taxes are increased on top-earners that it would be done in a way which minimizes the impact on money going towards job investments (such money is not 'excess' wealth and benefits those in lower strata), and lastly that we find a way to boost low-earners mobility and not just simply handing them a paycheck.
Sorry for the double post
that's a very moderate and well thought answer. If only everyone was like that...
yeah but Duel, although everyone looses if grades are redistributed, it isn't that simple in the economy. If the lower sectors of the population are doing very badly in income through time, then that means social mobility decreases, racial problems increase, health problems increase, and the economy is weakened as people cannot afford buying things like they used to... and then companies loose money, unemployment increases...
there is also the effect that Bryant is talking about, where some inequality actually allows some people to earn more and reinvest it...it is true, but this effect is usually weaker than the first. It's not like in grades of an exam, where my results have no effect on someone else's well being (if I get 4.0 or 1.0, nobody will be affected). My GPA will never affect my classmates, so it's not the same thing as income. If a handful of people get good grades, that will not be an impediment for other people to get good grades. While if income is very unequal, it reduces the chances of lower income citizens to gain access to higher income. So while grade redistribution is terrible, it doesn't mean it is terrible in income. Note, as Bryant said, just handing checks isn't great either. There are other ways of doing it without giving free money to poor people.
For example, when the government raises taxes on high income (like those
american taxes from 1930's to 1981), the government can redistribute the extra income by investing in infrastructure and education. Is that free money? Nope. People have to work for it and the economy and society is better off. Just my two cents. And again, im not saying that everyone is going to be magically equal... im just saying that we shouldn't be like this (right end of the graph):