Rich, poor income gap widens is an article in the Chicago Tribune.
The report, which offers a state-by-state analysis, suggests the gap between the nation's top earners and lower- and middle-income families is widening because of powerful economic forces, such as global competition, combined with government policies.
"The wealth and income is once again accruing to families at the very top," said Jared Bernstein, senior economist at the Washington, D.C.-based Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank.
The study was conducted by the institute and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Economists at conservative institutions don't dispute that inequality is growing, but they disagree about the causes and solutions.
"The important thing is, everybody is doing better," said Rea Hederman Jr., senior policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation. "Even people at the bottom quintile are better off than they were at the start of the period."
The report goes on to state a falsehood.
From the post-World War II period into the 1970s, average wages moved in lockstep with the country's economic growth, benefiting workers at all income levels equally, Bernstein said. But that changed starting in the 1980s, when the gap between rich and poor began to widen.
Income inequality indeed declined from World War II until about 1969. It fluctuated for a few years and then began to increase in 1975, not the 1980s. This is an attempt to link income inequality to Reagan's tax policies. The change began six years before Reagan's policies, and changes in inequality have been unlinked to tax policies over the past half-century. (See my post about Economic Status.)
There is a much more likely cause for the rise. What social trends began circa 1970 that have carried forward into the present?
1. An explosion in single-parent households headed by parents with poor education.
2. A steady increase in two wage-earner households.
What also appears to be missing from the report is income from entitlements and government assistance. I don't know that to be true, but I have suspicions.
Also, there has been no significant change in income inequality (using the Gini Index) for the last five years.
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