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posted by janrinok on Sunday September 29 2019, @03:55AM   Printer-friendly
from the I-forgot-what-the-plan-was dept.

Extreme policies lead to extreme outcomes.

Income inequality reached its highest level in more than half a century last year, as a record-long economic expansion continued to disproportionately benefit some of the wealthiest Americans.

A key measure of wealth distribution jumped to 0.485 in 2018, the Census Bureau said Thursday, its highest reading since the so-called Gini index was started in 1967. The gauge, which uses a scale between 0 and 1, stood at 0.482 a year earlier.

Work alone won't solve poverty—unless wages and earnings pick up substantially. It still takes government aid for families with children and others who do not earn enough, despite working 40 plus hours a week.

The most troubling thing about the new report, says William M. Rodgers III, a professor of public policy and chief economist at the Heldrich Center at Rutgers University, is that it "clearly illustrates the inability of the current economic expansion, the longest on record, to lessen inequality."

According to some research, US income inequality might be higher than it was during the Roman Empire, and pre-tax income inequality is as high as it was in the Roaring Twenties.

What Is to Blame?

Income inequality is blamed on cheap labor in China, unfair exchange rates, and jobs outsourcing. Corporations are often blamed for putting profits ahead of workers. But they must to remain competitive. U.S. companies must compete with lower-priced Chinese and Indian companies who pay their workers much less. As a result, many companies have outsourced their high-tech and manufacturing jobs overseas. The United States has lost 20 percent of its factory jobs since 2000. These were traditionally higher-paying union jobs.

Service jobs have increased, but these are much lower paid.

If current policies touted as "decreasing globalism" in the US economy are trying to reduce income inequality, they're failing.


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  • (Score: 2) by Absolutely.Geek on Sunday September 29 2019, @08:49PM (1 child)

    by Absolutely.Geek (5328) on Sunday September 29 2019, @08:49PM (#900515)

    In large parts of the rest of the world healthcare is a right.

    In NZ I can take my kids to the doctor for free....like actually fully no money changes hands; not insurance co-pay bullshit; free. Until they are 13 years old. Dentistry free until 18.

    Prescriptions are heavily subsidized; usually $5 for most things. If I have a community services card (low income family) that can also be free, it is on a sliding scale.

    There are a bunch of things like that here; not stressing about simple shit like that is one of the reasons we are always in the top 10 in the happiest countries in the world.

    --
    Don't trust the police or the government - Shihad: My mind's sedate.
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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Friday October 04 2019, @01:01PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday October 04 2019, @01:01PM (#902586) Journal

    In NZ I can take my kids to the doctor for free

    Breathing air is free. You're merely talking about something paid for with Other Peoples' Money.

    Prescriptions are heavily subsidized

    Almost free!