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The Income-Inequality Myth (Reports of skyrocketing incomes for the wealthy are unfounded)
National Review ^ | 01/10/2012 | Michael Tanner

Posted on 01/10/2012 6:53:02 AM PST by SeekAndFind

As we listen to President Obama, Occupy Wall Street, and much of the mainstream media working themselves into a lather over inequality in America, one thinks of “Harrison Bergeron,” the 1961 short story by Kurt Vonnegut that posited a society based on perfect equality, “not only equal before God and the law . . . equal every which way.” The government employed a “Handicapper General” to ensure that no one was smarter, more athletic, or more productive than anyone else. Beautiful people were forced to wear masks, athletic people had to carry weights, and intelligent people wore radios in their ears to interrupt their thoughts with loud noises.

Yet for all the sound and fury — and beating drums in Zuccotti Park — almost everything that people presume about inequality in America is wrong.

For example, nearly all reporting on income inequality in America has suggested that the incomes of the rich have been rising, while incomes for the rest of us have been stagnant or even declining. But that may represent a significant misreading of the data.

Most studies of inequality, including the recent widely reported study by the Congressional Budget Office, rely on IRS-reported taxable income. But, as studies by the Cato Institute’s Alan Reynolds and others show, reports of skyrocketing incomes among the top 1 percent of earners may be distorted by changes in the tax code that have resulted in more wealth being reported as taxable income. These tax changes caused businesses to switch from filing under the corporate tax system to filing as individuals, and executives to switch from accepting stock options taxed as capital gains to nonqualified stock options taxed as salaries. Simultaneously, the reductions in income-tax rates in 1986 caused much previously unreported income to show up on tax returns.

At the same time, incomes among lower- and middle-income workers have been shifting from cash wages to non-cash benefits such as health insurance and pensions. These non-cash benefits frequently do not show up as taxable income even though they have value to the worker. In fact, a recent study by Mark Warshawsky of the Social Security Advisory Board suggests that nearly all of the recent increase in earnings inequality “can be explained by the rapid increase in the cost of health insurance employee benefits, and that therefore [there] has not been as significant increase, if any, in inequality of compensation.”

Similarly, many studies looking at low-income Americans fail to account for non-cash social-welfare benefits such as food stamps, housing subsidies, and Medicaid. Fully accounting for all of these factors suggests that the gap between rich and poor may not be nearly as large as thought, and that inequality may not be growing at all.

Studies also show that what inequality does exist is not the result of the Bush tax cuts or a failure to spend more on social-welfare programs, but on the transformation of the American economy from a focus on manufacturing to information and technology. This change puts a greater premium on education. As a result, the incomes of high-school dropouts or those with just high-school degrees have stagnated while incomes for many college graduates and those with graduate-level educations have increased significantly. The unfortunate fact is that despite massive increases in education spending, large segments of our society remain unprepared for a 21st-century economy. That is a tragedy, but it has nothing to do with tax cuts for the rich.

In the end, however, one has to ask a more basic question. Why do we care about inequality at all?

Poverty, of course, is a bad thing. But is inequality? After all, if we doubled everyone’s income tomorrow, we would eliminate an enormous amount of economic hardship. Yet, inequality would actually increase. As Margaret Thatcher said about those who obsess over inequality, “So long as the [income] gap is smaller, they would rather have the poor poorer.”

In what way does someone else’s success harm me? Such a viewpoint stems from the misguided notion that the economy is a pie of fixed size. If one person gets a bigger portion of the pie, others of necessity get smaller pieces, and the role of government is to divide up the slices of that pie. In reality, though, the size of the pie is infinite. But to make it grow, we need people who are ambitious, skilled risk-takers. We need people to be ever striving for more. That means that they must be rewarded for their efforts, their skills, their ambitions, and their risks. Such rewards inevitably lead to greater inequality. But as Nobel Prize–winning economist Gary Becker pointed out, “It would be hard to motivate most people if everyone had the same earnings, status, prestige, and other rewards.”

Another Nobel Prize winner, F. A. Hayek, concluded, “The rapid economic advance that we have come to expect seems to be in large measure a result of this inequality and to be impossible without it. Progress at such a fast rate cannot take place on a uniform front but must take place in an echelon fashion, with some far in front of the rest.”

We should all seek a prosperous, growing economy, with less poverty, and where everyone can rise as far as their talent and drive will take them. Equality? Who needs it?

— Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and author of Leviathan on the Right: How Big-Government Conservatism Brought Down the Republican Revolution.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: income; inequality; myth

1 posted on 01/10/2012 6:53:12 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Bottomline: you either believe in the redistribution of wealth, or you don’t. IMO, this isn’t the government’s “problem” to solve.


2 posted on 01/10/2012 7:02:26 AM PST by ClearCase_guy (Nothing will change until after the war.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The problem with the income equality concept is that there is always going to be more mobility on the upper end. The rich can get richer, but the broke can’t exactly get broker. And of course, these graphs don’t reflect movement of people from one income bracket to another. It’s a misleading tool for changing tax policies or pushing class warfare.


3 posted on 01/10/2012 7:20:08 AM PST by edge919
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Expose The Clowns In DC


Click Obamas Cabinet

Support Free Republic

4 posted on 01/10/2012 7:34:21 AM PST by DJ MacWoW (America! The wolves are here! What will you do?)
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To: SeekAndFind

bm


5 posted on 01/10/2012 7:49:43 AM PST by Para-Ord.45 (+ <--- All I got was this plus sign)
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To: SeekAndFind

I have been told, by trusted liberals, that large income inequalities are bad for an economy and society as a whole. Supposedly, there are “studies” that prove this. I’d love to have such an article here to see it picked apart.


6 posted on 01/10/2012 8:57:11 AM PST by Paradox (The rich SHOULD be paying more taxes, and they WOULD, if they could make more money.)
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To: Paradox
large income inequalities are bad for an economy and society as a whole.

That is true: the government has more income than anyone and the more they claim, the worse the economy. The growing income inequality between the federal government and the income of Exxon, Ford, Intel, Boeing, Walmart is bankrupting us.

7 posted on 01/10/2012 1:04:05 PM PST by Reeses (TV gives men a window into what women want, and it isn't pretty.)
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To: Reeses

The map above from API shows gasoline taxes by state (combined local, state and federal), which range from a low of 26.4 cents per gallon in Alaska to a high of of 66.1 cents per gallon in California, averaging 48.1 cents per gallon across all states. How does that compare to oil company industry profits per gallon?
According to this post on Exxon Mobil’s Perspective Blog , “For every gallon of gasoline, diesel or finished products we manufactured and sold in the United States in the last three months of 2010, we earned a little more than 2 cents per gallon. That’s not a typo. Two cents.”

http://www.dailymarkets.com/economy/2011/04/27/gasoline-taxes-vs-exxon-profit-per-gallon/

We’ll know the Feds are serious about electrical and alternative fuel vehicles when government is no longer so dependent on gasoline taxation for revenue.


8 posted on 01/10/2012 1:16:16 PM PST by mo
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To: Paradox

All you need is a history book. Anywhere there has been great poverty, there has always been revolution.


9 posted on 01/16/2012 6:43:42 AM PST by Melas (u)
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To: Melas
All you need is a history book. Anywhere there has been great poverty, there has always been revolution.

I am asking about income inequality, not poverty. Think about it.

10 posted on 01/16/2012 10:54:35 AM PST by Paradox (I want Obama defeated. Period.)
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To: Paradox
I am asking about income inequality, not poverty. Think about it.

The two go hand in hand, think about it. There is always an elite in every society, and there is always the impoverished. The middle class is a buffer that enables political stability. When the ranks of the poor grow, it's always because the middle class is becoming poorer. There are no historical instances of a growing disparity in wealth where the middle class shrank, the wealthy grew, and the poor remained the same. The middle class always shrinks towards poverty.

11 posted on 01/16/2012 2:02:58 PM PST by Melas (u)
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To: Melas
The two go hand in hand, think about it.

Not necessarily, I am looking for info on JUST income disparity.

12 posted on 01/17/2012 10:02:16 AM PST by Paradox (I want Obama defeated. Period.)
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