If our economy is doing so well, why are so few of us better off? The answer: rising wage inequality. Since the early 1970s, the gains of growth have gone almost entirely to a small fraction of the wealthiest and most powerful. Today, American wage inequality is a national crisis, and the question must be: What are we going to do about it? In an impassioned argument backed by impressive statistical evidence, James Galbraith shows that inequality is not inevitable, nor irreversible, nor the result of impersonal market forces. Instead, blame belongs to specific political decisions and the poor economic performance they produced. And the solution lies within reach, through a return to an economic policy commited to full employment, low and stable interest rates, strong and stable economic growth, and control of inflation by civilized means. For decades before 1970, America was home to booming technological progress amidst a stable relationship between rich and poor. We were, in those years, a true middle-class society. It was only when the government decided to abandon the goal of full employment, to fight inflation by throwi.
Created Unequal : The Crisis in American Pay