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Back Opinion 'The Price of Inequality'

'The Price of Inequality'

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A NEW book, entitled "The Price of Inequality” by Joseph E. Stiglitz, directs the public debate from the models and views of the recent past. Usually the discussions center on one or two positions: either the Democratic Party position of more government regulation on the economy, or the ultra-conservative Tea Party position of no government involvement in the economy. Maybe the solutions to our current economic problems are found elsewhere.

Professor of economics at Columbia University, Joseph Stiglitz offers the country a better understanding of why we Americans are so divided, separate and unequal. I think Professor Stiglitz correctly points out our two-tier society (the 99 percent and 1 percent) and why there exists an Occupy Wall Street movement. He states in his book, "Politics have shaped the market, and shaped it in ways that advantage the top at the expense of the rest.” Further, he believes the exercise of political power by the highly financed special interests overrides the normal legislative and regulatory processes and has disproportionately shaped the present disparity.

The more affluent (Wall Street corporations and banks) gain the bulk of the resources by insulating themselves from normal market competitive forces. Congress has provided a skewed tax treatment for the top and huge corporate subsidies for them.

Stiglitz describes the economic capture of regulatory authorities by the special interests and the more subtle intellectual capture of the policy makers. He claims the shaping of public discussion allowed ultra-conservative analyses to dominate debate in the years before the collapse of 2008, and even in the years since then.

Backing up the author are other voices: Paul Krugman, Robert B. Reich, Lawrence Lessig, Jacob Hacker, Paul Pierson and Timothy Noah. These currently active experts also think these unjust politics threaten and explain the huge disparities in wealth and income. Also, they think that excessive inequality amounts to “sand in the gears of capitalism” which leads to undermining productivity and retarding growth.

Stiglitz stated his own position best in a recent online column: “Inequality leads to lower growth and less efficiency. Lack of opportunity means that the most valuable asset – its people – is not being fully used. Many at the bottom, or even in the middle, are not living up to their potential, because the rich, needing few public services and worried that a strong government might redistribute income, use their political influence to cut taxes and curtail government spending. This leads to underinvestment in infrastructure, education and technology, impeding the engines of growth. ... Most importantly, America’s inequality is undermining its values and identity. With inequality reaching such extremes, it is not surprising that its effects are manifest in every public decision, from the conduct of monetary policy to budgetary allocations. America has become a country not ‘with justice for all,’ but rather with favoritism for the rich and justice for those who can afford it – so evident in the foreclosure crisis, in which the big banks believed that they were too big not only to fail, but also to be held accountable.”

To order a change in direction, to change the existing thinking in Congress, and to move forward for a proper economic balance and new holistic plans – how about our leaders reading this book?

Comments  

 
0 #6 MVGuam Editor 2012-10-11 15:01
Quoting johnsmith:
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September 19th....

October 10th....

Same column ?...

Hasta

Oops...sorry about that. But it got some interesting comment the second time around.
 
 
0 #5 johnsmith 2012-10-10 15:54
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September 19th....

October 10th....

Same column ?...

Hasta
 
 
+1 #4 Phil 2012-10-10 11:17
Like many you assume that any discussion of conservatism, individualism, or mention of the TEA party is an endorsement of Romney or Republicans or disapproval of Democrats or the President. It is not.

The article implies that inequality in this country is due to the political power of corporatists. That may be true. The fact is that if you remove corporatists and instill another organization in their place, inequality will still exist, only for different reasons.

Corporatists do not run other countries. North Korea comes to mind. Korean culture is also one of the most collectivist on the planet. Do you see equality? I could say the same about any number of North African, Sub-Saharan African, or Middle Eastern countries.

The point is that the progressive dream of a utopia where everyone takes care of everyone else and is equal in all respects is a farce and a dangerous one to boot. Human beings (and other animals in nature) developed hierarchy as a means of survival.

This means that some animals will always be more equal than others.
 
 
0 #3 Mathew 2012-10-10 08:37
I won't shed any tear if President Obama loses his bid for a second term because he has governed like a 3rd Bush term. Now, if he was honest enough during the primary process in 2007 and 2008 and told his base that he would court hard-right Republicans or take up their ideas on both domestic policy issues such as on health-care, taxes and immigration and on foreign policy of increasing the war effort in Afghanistan, he would not have won the nomination. And there is no guarantee that if Mr. Obama wins a second term, that he will not go back to appeasing the hard-right folks, hoping, naively, that they will have a change of heart, or policy.

This, of course, does not mean that Gov. Romney would be any better in the WH. He will pursue the same GOP policies, with the help of ever-eager Democrats who want to "accomplish something", that led to this place in American history. But, let us just say that he will be pragmatic and do the right thing, however you want to define it. There is still one thing that makes it a dangerous proposition, and that is, that he is a member of a cult. It is not like Catholicism, which is also, according to the Word of God -- and evangelicals -- a false gospel. The difference is that Roman Catholics, by and large, do not pay homage to the Vatican. Who do Mormons pay homage to?

Finally, the GOP is tethered to their right-wing media and their owners. So, if you want real freedom, unleash the chain.
 
 
0 #2 Phil 2012-10-10 07:29
Sorry, but Mr. Stiglitz is no savant. One of the basics of organizational theory is that organizations both influence and are influenced by politics.

If you believe that in downsizing the influence of wall street you will not replace it with something else that is equally egregious, you also believe in the tooth fairy.

I also love how these articles always tie in TEA party or conservative groups. I read a pieced in the Daily Beast yesterday "Conservatism and Inequality". In it the author argues that individualism and equality don't go together.

What?

Show me the collectivist society where everyone is equal or equality is a top priority. Even pre-colonized Guam had a strict caste system. That is a joke.

Crickets? Anyone, anyone? Bueller?

Ever seen the "Hunger Games"? The disparity between the elite of Panem (the capital) and the rest of the "districts" seems like a pretty good representation of modern day Hollywood and Washington DC to me.
 
 
-1 #1 johnsmith 2012-10-10 06:23
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I cannot think of any patriotic, red blooded American who would not welcome the chance to move forward with a proper economic balance and holistic plans. This means, of cource, more taxes, bigger government and more regulations.

One of the new holistic plans that Obama and Hairy Reid have in store for Americans is a treaty to allow the UN to directly tax Americans and give my money to third world countries.

Reid will cram opps pass this treaty, Obama will sign it, the House is not involved. A treaty is like passing an Ammendent to the Constitution. Impossible to remove ( almost )

As you like to read books, click here

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/10/08/in-second-term-obama-will-allow-un-to-tax-americans/

I am thrilled to pay my money to the UN. Once this treaty is in place, we can enjoy more direct taxes, if we have any cash left.


America was not discovered, it was built.


hast[censored]
 

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