The discourse around inequality in this article and elsewhere is frustrating to me, because it advances the idea that inequality is fundamentally unjust, using the lives of the poor as the example.
To me this misses the point. The problem is not inequality, the problem is poverty. If everyone had enough that their basic needs were met and they were not struggling to survive, the fact that some people can afford Lamborghinis and some cannot would not be unjust in my opinion.
Without inequality, there are no Elon Musks. Bootstrapping SpaceX and Tesla required more than 1/6,000,000,000'th of the world's resources. Big results require investment, and it's not practical to crowdfund a multi-million dollar investment. So who should we entrust to make big bets? Doesn't it only make sense that the people who have already been the most successful in creating wealth should have the freedom to take that wealth to try out new ideas?
Inequality is not the problem. Poverty is the problem. Lack of access to education is the problem. We should strive to see that everyone can focus on improving their life and doing interesting things without struggling to survive. And if the most successful people take their spoils and build a 150-foot yacht, or take a ride into space, or invest in the next big company, more power to them.
Yep yep. The John Rawls's theory of justice should be a required topic in school.
What matters is how well the poorest in society are doing, not the income distribution. If a system creates a mega rich class but ends up with the poorest in society being better off - then that's a better system.
I'd also qualify that "poverty" is flexible and always changing. I live on 10K/yr in college (2 years ago). I had to share a room with a roommate, ate a lot of rice and beans. I was a pain in the ass - though not nearly as bad as I thought it would be. However not being able to afford a cellphone or a car, having an ancient computer and not being able to afford a lot of social activities (movies, restaurants, etc.) had a noticeable negative affect on my life. If I had grown up my whole life on 10K/yr it probably would have had a major impact.
20 years ago, a car and a phone and internet were a luxury, in Africa or South America it's still a luxury. In modern america, it's poverty.
Inequality not being fundamentally unjust does not imply it isn't a huge problem for society.
First of all, it makes it easy for the wealthy to lock the poor (and the rich) into their locations on the income graphs. The systems the wealthy can set in place are an impediment to a meritocracy by ensuring the rich stay rich and the poor stay poor, whether that is through boarding schools and trust funds or the Drug War and a toothless minimum wage. If the resulting massive disparity in wages implies one thing, it's that our civilization is wasting a lot of untapped human productivity on the low end of the wealth graph.
Secondly, it creates social resentment, fragmentation, and stratification. These are just emotions and Sociology Major words, yes, but that doesn't mean they aren't real. If the people at the bottom of the ladder feel like they don't have the power to climb, a society can end very badly as its political process becomes more polarized and communities are segregated.
Finally, it creates large gaps not just in material wealth, but political. Whether you're a liberal or a conservative, you think either the Koch Brothers or George Soros are destroying America. Either way, it can be agreed that democracies are undermined by a few unelected individuals wielding huge amounts of power. Less income inequality means less political inequality.
Nothing you said is wrong, but it's unhelpful. It distracts from how important dealing with growing income inequality will be in the future by saying "The discourse... is frustrating to me, because it's not pedantically right." It might be necessary if sama was arguing against large wealth disparities in a post-poverty civilization, but that is not what we have. Like you said: Poverty is the problem. And while we have poverty, poverty and inequality are closely linked.
> It might be necessary if sama was arguing against large wealth disparities in a post-poverty civilization, but that is not what we have. Like you said: Poverty is the problem. And while we have poverty, poverty and inequality are closely linked.
This is where you lose me. Solving the problem of poverty is a matter of making sure that the poorest people have enough. Solving the "problem" of inequality is a matter of making sure that nobody has "too much."
As long as resources are finite, there is an upper bound on how much one individual can have without depriving others. I'm not convinced we're near it, though...
Resources are not fixed. Our planet, our solar system, and our universe are awash in resources. The question is, how much does it cost to extract them, compared to their value once extracted? As technology advances and human ingenuity finds new ways to do things, more and more resources become available at a cost less than their value. That's been happening all through human history, and continues to happen now. Even if particular resources (e.g., oil) turn out to be finite, we find substitutes (e.g., nuclear, solar, or even oil from algae), so that in a practical sense we never run out.
There are finite resources in our light cone. Resources are fixed. I said that I didn't expect we were nearing those limits. Quite obviously we aren't nearing that limit, but I don't rule out the possibility that there may be other, more relevant ones.
Actually, if the universe is spatially infinite (which it is according to our best current models), this is not true even if we equate "resources" with "quantity of matter", which is what you are implicitly assuming.
However, this implicit assumption is false: what counts as a "resource", i.e., how much of what kind of matter it takes to accomplish a particular goal, is not fixed. It changes as technology and human knowledge changes. In principle there is no lower bound to how much of what kind of matter it can take to accomplish a particular goal, which means that in principle there is no upper bound to the amount of wealth that can be created with a fixed quantity of matter.
Quantity of matter, quantity of energy, necessary structure... What of it we can access is limited by our light cone.
"In principle there is no lower bound to how much of what kind of matter it can take to accomplish a particular goal, which means that in principle there is no upper bound to the amount of wealth that can be created with a fixed quantity of matter."
On the contrary, in principle such a bound exists, for any specific task (and accompanying present configuration of the universe). We are similarly not likely to be near the theoretical limits imposed by physics and the well-ordering principle, but again practical constraints may bind much tighter - particularly in the short term.
What of it we can access is limited by our light cone.
What of it we can access, and what use we can make of it (I notice that you have left out this point completely), at this point in time is limited by our past light cone and our current knowledge and technology, obviously. But what of it we can access, and what use we can make of it, indefinitely into the future is not; it is only limited by the entire universe and our future knowledge and technology.
On the contrary, in principle such a bound exists, for any specific task
For any specific task undertaken at a specific point in time, in a specific, fixed state of knowledge and technology, yes, there is such a bound in principle; but you made a much stronger claim than that.
Also, whether or not that in principle limit has practical significance even over "short" time scales such as a human lifetime depends on how fast our technology and knowledge changes, not just on what they are at a given instant.
"(I notice that you have left out this point completely)"
No, I didn't. I addressed it in the other half of my post, which you obviously saw since you responded to it. If every sentence must address all parts of the argument, we're all guilty of flagrant violations up and down this thread (and every other) and will need to be writing some awfully convoluted sentences.
"What of it we can access, and what use we can make of it [...] at this point in time is limited by our past light cone and our current knowledge and technology, obviously. But what of it we can access, and what use we can make of it, indefinitely into the future is not; it is only limited by the entire universe and our future knowledge and technology."
Per my understanding of relativity and the present state of physics (significantly received from others but I think that I followed it at the time) this is simply not the case (in particular, if time is finite then "everything our light cone will encompass before the end of time" is finite - and I think an expansionary universe makes things worse). I think we're going to need to bust out some math or expert testimony instead of simply making assertions at each other if we're going to get anywhere.
"For any specific task undertaken at a specific point in time, in a specific, fixed state of knowledge and technology, yes, there is such a bound in principle; but you made a much stronger claim than that."
There is a set of possible futures from any present. You hold that, for any task in any situation, with sufficient knowledge, the resources it can take can approach arbitrarily close to zero?
'Also, whether or not that in principle limit has practical significance even over "short" time scales such as a human lifetime depends on how fast our technology and knowledge changes, not just on what they are at a given instant.'
I don't think the bounds given by physics have any impact yet. I'm not convinced they ever will - my point was there is a theoretical bound, and there may be more practical bounds that matter at any time-scale.
Let's try to get this back closer to useful.
My original point, which I think too much was read into, was simply that there are situations in which some having more can lead to others having less, and that paying attention to whether we're in such a situation is worthwhile. I stated right there in that first comment that I didn't think we presently were, in most respects.
That was followed by a levelling of a charge of "zero-sum thinking" in an explicitly hypothesized zero-sum situation, which (again) I said I thought unlikely to be relevant. I found this amusing.
I see that you did say "for any specific task", but, as I noted in my response to that, it seemed inconsistent with the much stronger nature of the claim that seemed to me to be either implicit or explicit in the other things you said. So I was confused about exactly what position you were taking. I'm clearer about it in view of this post; see below.
Per my understanding of relativity and the present state of physics (significantly received from others but I think that I followed it at the time) this is simply not the case (in particular, if time is finite then "everything our light cone will encompass before the end of time" is finite - and I think an expansionary universe makes things worse).
If you think this, then your understanding of relativity is wrong. As I responded to your other post upthread, "time is finite" only if space is finite, per the Einstein Field Equation. And the expansion of the universe does not "make things worse" in any sense that I can see, because the only reasonable solutions for the universe as a whole are dynamic (the only static solution, Einstein's static universe with a nonzero cosmological constant, is unstable, like a pencil balanced on its point, so it's not really reasonable as a real-world solution).
You hold that, for any task in any situation, with sufficient knowledge, the resources it can take can approach arbitrarily close to zero?
Yes (with an appropriate definition of "any task in any situation"). Julian Simon, AFAIK, was the first to defend this claim in detail, in a series of economics papers in (IIRC) the 1980's. It was in this same time period that he made his famous bet with Paul Ehrlich (of "Population Bomb" fame) about whether the price of 5 common resources would fall (Simon's bet) or rise (Ehrlich's bet) over a period of some years. Simon won the bet for all 5.
I don't think the bounds given by physics have any impact yet. I'm not convinced they ever will
Then what's the point of talking about them? If you think there are more practical bounds, what are they?
My original point, which I think too much was read into, was simply that there are situations in which some having more can lead to others having less, and that paying attention to whether we're in such a situation is worthwhile.
But this is a different statement from "resources are finite". Some having more can lead to others having less even if there is plenty to go around (for example, consider investment banks and the economy tanking in 2008). I would say that skewed incentives, and our failure as a society to properly punish people who undermine basic institutions, are far more pressing problems than resource limits.
This seems a bizarre claim. If there is an end to time then even in flat space-time, if the region we can access starts out finite and grows at a finite rate, then when time ends it will have a finite maximum volume.
Which, according to the Einstein Field Equation, there can only be if the universe is closed, i.e., finite in size. I wasn't talking about what's conceivable logically; I was talking about what's actually possible, physically, given our best current theories.
In any event, "resources we can access before time T" unequivocally finite, and some needs must be met before time T for any T far enough out that it dramatically changes the resources we have available. Which means that in terms of considering distribution and making sure needs are met, there is a theoretical upper bound on the resources available, and zero-sum thinking would be appropriate once we have allocated enough to some individuals that there is literally not enough for others and have reached limits on improvements in efficiency. As I've said, I'm not at all convinced that we are near either.
the only important finite resources in the information age are smart people's time and energy. And even energy will be infinite given enough smart people's time.
You haven't made the case, just an assertion. It's certainly a case that can be made. I did not say that I believed us pushing any limits - I said I expected we were not. In the hypothetical where there is a zero-sum game, zero-sum thinking is appropriate - I meant no more than I said.
> whether that is through boarding schools and trust funds or the Drug War and a toothless minimum wage.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I have a feeling that the Drug War comes as much from conservatives in the middle class as from rich people (in a "think of the children" way, they want to keep their communities clean and healthy). (Not saying I agree with the Drug War, it's been a disaster so far).
Rich people in general don't have one unified opinion on the topic. Certain rich people are rich because of the Drug War, so they're strongly in favor of it.
I think you are taking these arguments too literally. The issue isn't inequality in itself, it is the degree to which inequality exists. Wealth inequality in the US is at all time highs. Part of this is due to globalization and technology, but a good part of it is also attributable to record low tax rates and business friendly government policy. Meanwhile, tuition at the public university I attended has increased by 400% in the past 10 years.
I don't think anyone cares about rich people driving fancy cars. They can spend their money how they like. Additionally, I don't think we will ever get rid of poverty entirely. The implicit agreement that we have reached as a society is that as long as the government ensures equal opportunity and social mobility, we will tolerate a certain degree of wealth inequality. Unfortunately, that inequality is so extreme that it is negatively impacting opportunity and mobility.
Your comment does exactly what I am describing. Your advocacy assumes all of the following are true without actually offering any evidence for them:
- "too much" wealth inequality is an a priori problem
- "extreme" inequality negatively impacts opportunity and mobility
- the increase in school tuition is somehow a symptom of this
You also said I'm taking things too literally, but is Elon Musk not an example of the "extreme" wealth inequality you are describing?
When people talk about extreme wealth inequality, they aren't talking about the existence of individual outliers from the mean, they are talking about the overall characteristics of the distribution function as shown in measures like the Gini coefficient.
A coherent community smaller than the whole universe of interest that demonstrates the same distributional features can be an example of extreme wealth inequality, an individual cannot -- this is important, because you can have extreme outliers with a relatively flat overall distribution, so its an error to try to say that being against extreme wealth inequality (in the sense that people are usually speaking when complaining about it) means being against any individual extremely wealthy person.
I expect the above was at least partly a joke - inequality is a relation between multiple parties, so not a property of one individual. Obviously, points of reference were implicit.
> Inequality is not the problem. Poverty is the problem.
Not necessarily. The article doesn't develop the argument, but hints at the fact that if the perception of unfairness (due to observed wealth inequality irrespective of the poverty rate) in a society becomes sufficiently widespread, there could be negative consequences. The most extreme example is probably a violent revolution of the less wealth against the extremely wealthy.
Arguable. Being hungry, homeless or sick is an actual problem that causes people great suffering. Driving a Honda while one's neighbor drives a Ferrari shouldn't cause anyone any suffering (if it does, it's self-inflicted). The former is poverty, the latter is inequality.
So are you arguing that having less luxury than others (but still luxury) causes people psychological pain, so society should give everyone everything they want? I don't think even the most hardcore communists ever asked for that.
> So are you arguing that having less luxury than others (but still luxury) causes people psychological pain, so society should give everyone everything they want?
No. You can tell that, because I didn't:
1) Assert the premise you propose, or
2) Assert the conclusion you propose.
> I don't think even the most hardcore communists ever asked for that.
Probably not. It's a ridiculous strawman you just invented.
One key point that is missed in this article: why do people making minimum wage have trouble making ends meet? Because all this advance of technology has not made the necessities of life cheaper in the same way it's made, say, computers cheaper. For a few hundred dollars today, you can buy orders of magnitude more computing power than existed in the entire world when I was a child. Yet it's still difficult for people working low wage jobs to afford food, housing (meaning housing in an area that's reasonably safe to live in), and transportation (again, that's reasonably safe to use).
Why is that? Why has all this enormous improvement in productivity not made the necessities of life so cheap that even someone making minimum wage can easily afford them? It seems to me that fixing that would go a long way towards fixing the problems Altman is talking about, yet nobody talks about it.
Do you agree with the statement "Food is at least as expensive in America in 2014 as it was in 1974"? If so I have some really great news for you, but I don't want to put words in your mouth.
Do you agree with the statement "Food is at least as expensive in America in 2014 as it was in 1974"?
No; that wasn't the point I was making. The point I was making was that, as a responder to you noted, food has not fallen in price the way other things like electronics have. Granted, there isn't a Moore's Law for food the way there is for computers, as someone noted downthread; but still, it doesn't seem like food has fallen in price as much as it should have given the increases in productivity that have taken place. I think a key reason for this is that the government messes with food prices in ways that it does not mess with prices in other sectors of the economy.
But another point that could be made is that, if food has fallen significantly in price (which, as several posters now have quoted numbers to show, it has), why do we still hear so much about people having trouble making ends meet at the low end of the income scale? In other words, is the problem Altman is talking about a real problem, or just a perceived problem?
Do you agree with the statement "For a few hundred dollars today, you can buy orders of magnitude more [food] than existed in the entire world [in 1974]"?
I kid, of course - and I'm actually interested in hearing the parent poster's response - but clearly food hasn't fallen in the same way that electronics have.
Correct, see http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R40545.pdf . You'll note that even for the lowest quintile this is a decline of over 50%. It would be higher if you just looked at constant consumption, but we don't do that, because our societal consensus is that poor Americans in 2014 do and should treat as standard what Americans in 1960 treated as luxury, including most relevantly, having other people cook for them.
This is because, and I know this statement is controversial, America is radically wealthier at all levels in 2014 compared to 1974.
Partially because real wages for people making minimum wage are down (I touched on some of the reasons why in the post). It's worse in concentrated rich areas like San Francisco.
However, I do think costs have come down in a lot of areas.
One reason is that as technology improves, the value of a person's time ("productivity") also increases. Thus although manufactured goods get cheaper, services get more expensive (due to opportunity cost).
Most of the day to day innovations you use are owned by minimum wage earners. Cellular phones, TVs, cars and internet are nearly ubiquitous items.
It's not that innovation did not reach the needy, it's just that there are some problems that are outside the influence of technology. For example, making neighborhoods safer or promoting better family planning.
Aren't unsafe neighborhoods so because of, first and foremost, their inhabitants?
Aren't unsafe neighborhoods so because of, first and foremost, their inhabitants?
Because of some inhabitants, yes. But there have always been a small percentage of people that are going to try to prey on others. Whether or not they succeed depends on how the rest of society deals with such activities--not just the people living in the same neighborhood, but society as a whole.
I think the answer is more or less that transportation costs aren't going down. We produce more than enough food to feed the entire world population, but the poor can't afford to buy it because of the cost of transporting it to them.
This doesn't seem right to me. Transportation costs are negligible for all sorts of products. It costs more in gasoline for you to drive to your local Best Buy and bring home a DVD player than it does to ship that DVD player from the factory in East Asia somewhere halfway across the planet to the store. Huge economies of scale have been realized in transportation.
If, on the other hand, we include under "transportation costs" the costs of dealing with corrupt governments in many countries who enrich themselves at the expense of their people, then yes, there are significant transportation costs in getting food to poor people in many countries.
> Yet it's still difficult for people working low wage jobs to afford food, housing (meaning housing in an area that's reasonably safe to live in), and transportation (again, that's reasonably safe to use).
I think one thing ties these together (as a common denominator): land. There's a limited supply of land in any city/county/state/country/planet, so people must compete for it. Agriculture also requires land, and you can't even scale it vertically as well as you can scale housing (you may build taller buildings, but not taller farms).
Yes, there's a finite supply of land, but much of it is not currently being used for either housing (or more generally, housing, offices, factories, and all the infrastructure that goes with them, such as roads) or agriculture. In fact, IIRC, the fraction of land on the Earth that is used for all such purposes has been decreasing in recent years.
On a related note, I found this online game to be somewhat enlightening in terms of pointing out various costs and difficulties faced by those at the bottom end of the socioeconomic scale:
It probably has to do with how some technologies scale. For example, processing power advances exponentially with time (see Moore's law). Few other things do. The things you would consider a "necessity of life" have scaled linearly, if at all.
Food production has certainly advanced with GM crops that are resistant to insects, droughts, etc. and produce more edible material per acre, but not that much more. Fertilizers and insecticides have also improved yields, but just a bit. Farm machinery has advanced tremendously but, as discussed in the article, it lets fewer farmers work more land rather than making the land itself more productive. Food is still pretty expensive to produce. Most nations do produce more food than they can consume though, even some that experience famine. Distribution is still a big problem and a huge part of the cost of food.
The average person now has access to a huge variety of foods from distant places. Transporting food costs a tremendous amount, both in terms of money and environmental impact. This is why you often hear about local foods being better for the environment. However, a rather large portion of the world's population has only seasonal access to locally produced fresh produce, which we now consider necessity for good health. If, like a large portion of the world's population, you live in a place where fresh produce is seasonal, consider what your diet would have looked like before canning came along. Technology has performed wonders for the average person's winter diet!
Of course, technology has a funny way of turning on itself. The triumph of spinach, oranges, and bananas in January has been followed by potato chips and cola. We turned food from a necessity into an addiction. Brilliant minds toil away in corporate labs, trying to find some new way to increase the "mouth share" of their product lines. The goal is not to satiate, but to arouse never-ending hunger for your product!
One simple, practical thing that could be done would be to rework farm subsidies. Corn is one of the most heavily subsidized crops in the U.S.. Corn farmers are paid well to produce a crop that has often not been in demand. One root of the anti-globalization movement is the Zapatista revolt in Mexico, which was, in part, sparked by NAFTA flooding the Mexican market with super-cheap subsidized Iowa corn and putting marginal, non-mechanized unsubsidized corn-farmers out of business en masse. Domestically, it's not a huge surprise that high-fructose corn-syrup found its way into most processed foods. High-fructose corn syrup is cheap because corn is cheap, and corn is cheap because our taxes pay farmers to grow it. If you look at the other top subsidized crops in the U.S., you'll not a common theme. After feed-crops (mostly corn), there's cotton, wheat, rice, soy, dairy, peanuts, sugar, wool tobacco[1]... It's mostly high-calorie crops rather than high-nutrient. How Tobacco snuck in there, I have no idea.
Why not change subsidies to be aware of crop destination and emphasize dietary health? Slap a big-ol subsidy on spinach and broccoli sold fresh to market and obliterate the subsidy on corn used for high-fructose corn-syrup. Healthy foods get cheaper, unhealthy foods get more expensive.
> Food is dirt cheap compared to housing, especially if you shop smart.
Don't be ridiculous. Have you ever tried to buy food on a minimum wage budget? If you want to eat anything that has even a modicum of nutritional value, minimum wage won't get you much.
I'm not suggesting that expensive/organic food is worth it's price. Nor am I suggesting that minimum wage should be raised to the point where everyone could afford to shop at Whole Foods. But if you honestly believe that the author is wrong when he writes "it's still difficult for people working low wage jobs to afford food", then you need a reality check.
If you want to eat anything that has even a modicum of nutritional value, minimum wage won't get you much.
Sure it will; it just won't get you much in the way of enjoyable food. People mostly don't like living on beans and lentils; but you can get sufficient essential nutrients from unappetizing foods like that for a few dollars a day.
Please note that I am not saying anyone should have to live on beans and lentils; I'd be no good at it myself. But we should be clear that the problem is not "getting enough to eat"; the problem is "getting enough to eat with some kind of decent quality of life".
I've lived almost my entire adult life on a minimum wage budget (and/or close to it).
I think it really depends a lot on where you live. I live in NYC now, and fruits and vegetables here are about 75% cheaper than when I lived in the midwest. I can get a pound of blackberries for $2, when I'd pay probably double that for just a few ounces of them in my home state. Takeout is almost as cheap as cooking (filling, tasty meal for $4-5), which helps drives down costs when you're exhausted and don't have any more energy left to make something.
If you want cheap, healthy food, try shopping in some of ethnic stores in lower income neighborhoods. That's what I do. I can walk out of the local Asian grocery store with enough food for 2 for a week and it costs me about $50. It's mostly vegetables.
I think a lot of our discussion about this topic is limited because we're still a capitalist society that largely views social trends through the lens of economics. At some point in time, things like "GDP" and income distribution where fairly good proxies for notions like "overall well being" and "aspirational stability" (more thought is required on this second term).
I think as technology progresses, we're going to see the use of money as a proxy for social measurement drift further and further away from actual reality. Any new social paradigm is going to have to start with fundamentals of human nature -- human competitiveness, equal opportunity, etc.
In short, I think our failure to respond to these changes is mostly a failure of us to think clearly about what actually going on in the day-to-day lives of actors in this new technological world. I don't know where we start, but existential philosophy seems like a good jumping board.
My thoughts are jumbled. I'd flush them out, but I need to get back to work.
Honest question: are people surprised at the wealth distribution?
It seems quite a few HNers are familiar with Pareto's principle & 80/20 and the current wealth distribution reflects that almost perfectly (Top 20% = 84% of wealth).[1]
I'm not saying that being in that top 20% doesn't bear certain responsibilities, but it shouldn't necessarily be surprising.
Even if wealth and income will roughly fall along a Pareto distribution (plausible, but needs some argument), that doesn't mean the 80/20 is universal. Only some Pareto distributions (characterized by certain parameters) display the 80/20 principle.
e.g. the Gini coefficient for an idealized Pareto distribution displaying the 80/20 principle is by definition 0.60. But Gini coefficients can obviously vary a lot from that, so societies definitely can exhibit either more or less wealth inequality.
The thesis of the article seems to be that wealth inequality, even if accompanied by a total wealth increase (and perhaps even if accompanied by a wealth increase for every single person, although that's not made explicit), is still "unfair" and therefore worth combating.
But I'm confused when the article shifts between talking about what "is really unfair" and what "feels really unfair" (i.e. normative vs. descriptive fairness). I would have preferred a more consistent foundation for the thesis. Either argue why the normative view is valid, or demonstrate that a large portion of people do think wealth inequality is unfair. I think the latter is a more potent argument, especially paired with the claim that "the traditional endings to extreme wealth inequality in a society are never good."
The article is vague on the "is" versus "feels", but keep in mind that there is no objective notion of fairness.
Every discussion of fairness or - on this topic - distributive justice must acknowledge the different starting points / moral axioms that people might bring to the table. There are the egalitarians, often of a Rawls-type background, there are the procedural justice people (most internet libertarians, though usually not consistently so), there are just deserts (also typically applied inconsistently) and probably more that I am missing right now.
Let's say a large portion of people do think that it is unfair that they do not have the same amount of wealth as other, smaller group of people. Would you consider it to be acceptable for the larger group to appropriate smaller group's wealth using that premise?
False frame. Wealth--meaning a state-granted monopoly to some amount of capital, and a government promise to perform violence on anyone who disregards that monopoly--is a social contract. People are only talking about renegotiating the exact terms of that contract.
It definitely can and should, but it looks very different from the way it looks with a government present to perform violence on violators. And even what counts as a violation is very different with a government than without. That's the point--and if it didn't, there'd be no reason to add in the extra administrative costs of government to get the same results.
And to be clear: government enforcement of property through violence provides plenty of social value, but those reformulated property rights are socially defined and subject to change, and not natural in any sense.
In the Types Of Economies That Work wars of the early 1900s, Marx kept pointing out the end result of capitalism will be the rich few controlling most of the wealth. It's only natural after all, the profit flows to the owners, not the workers: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_stratification#Karl_Marx
We do the same thing today. Everybody knows you're a rube if you're just working—that's why there's Founder Mania around here. Get your fake 60% ownership, hire people to create value under you, capture most of the profit/exit yourself.
Congrats on including actual charts (and some infographics too). Much nicer than just another "X is happening. Oh noes!" perspective.
It's easy to talk about inequality from a macro perspective, but imagine this...
Imagine Bill Gates is sitting next to a McDonalds employee. Bill is millions of times wealthier than this guy. He could afford to hire 100,000 minimum wage employees for life.
By all accounts Bill is lucky. He's smart and works hard too, but he's basically lucky.
And increasingly, society suggests that we deserve some slice of his luck, because we have less. But why? Our government guarantees your right to private property. Once you own something, it's yours. When we choose to believe in a threshold at which the rules of private property cease, we erode Bill's incentive to participate in the market. If that doesn't feel like a big deal now, wait until the disincentive slides down to your level of income.
I'm not saying that civic society shouldn't do anything for marginalized people. Education can have a meaningful effect on their wages and technology is going to shake the markets and people need help to smooth their individual outcomes, but to say that they deserve Bill's money simply because he's rich is a nasty nasty attitude.
We need to seek an environment that allows everyone to grow through profitable employment, not artificially rebalance the top-end.
He could afford to hire 100,000 minimum wage employees for life.
But he doesn't, does he? In other words, Bill Gates is not using his wealth very efficiently; it would be more efficiently used if it were spread around. It's not his fault, exactly: no single person can be expected to make efficient use of $30 billion, or whatever his current net worth is. But the fact remains that it seems likely that there is some maximum level of wealth that a single person can make reasonably efficient use of, simply because a single person doesn't scale. If that's true, then that's an argument for altering the rules of private property if a single person accumulates wealth above that level.
As for incentives, I find it very difficult to believe that if, for example, we set a threshold net worth of $100 million and said that anything above that gets taxed away (of course it would be more complicated than that in practice, but let's keep it simple for this discussion), Bill Gates wouldn't have started Microsoft because, oh, well, he's only going to get $100 million from it.
This (rather Randian) model of things is so contrived. Focus on the individual, their achievements, and personal wealth as untouchable property are half-truths, mythology, and contrivances.
The economy is a collective thing. It's a network of people with money, goods, and services flowing between them. Serious wealth is and has always been primarily about one's positioning in the system, and only indirectly about their abilities or value delivered. Yes, presumably ability and achievement often have some influence on that positioning, but it's that mechanical fact of sitting in the thick part of the flow that matters when it comes to making a lot of money. (E.g. I get paid the same pretty much no matter what I do, while my blue-collar friends have to log hours and really work. Yeah, eventually I could potentially lose my job if I really do nothing, but in reality I can get away with doing very little - direct deposit still happens, because that's the system. I am so positioned with respect to the company's payroll system.)
I don't see the problem with making changes at the systemic level to how the flow works (taxes, basic income), as well as making it easier for people to move around (which you addressed, re: education. e.g. returning college to affordability would be truly great).
> This (rather Randian) model of things is so contrived. Focus on the individual, their achievements, and personal wealth as untouchable property are half-truths, mythology, and contrivances.
> The economy is a collective thing.
The economy is a collective of individuals, all of which must put in effort into making things work; people generally don't put in effort unless rewarded. For real-world examples of societies that put the collective above the individual, take a look at communist countries. Most of them failed, whereas the individualistic West still stands (I say this coming from Eastern Europe and seeing how much damage collectivism can do).
Big players contribute to the economy as a whole through capital investment and get a return on their investment's growth. To the extent that we tax them into a corner, we reduce their incentive to make capital investment.
In the long term, we do not increase opportunity by reducing capital investment.
The problem of inequality is mostly a local thing where gentrification is taking progress, or on a wider scale, a media debate. No one seriously feels inadequate because of how the people on Forbes 500 live. They are so far out of the average person sphere that it has no significance on anyone.
Likewise, I doubt a person from Mississippi genuinely feels a disparty with his investment banking brethren in NYC.
In short, I don't think inequality is something people feel unless there's an ongoing public debate. People judge themselves by their immediate environment, which I believe follows a normal distribution nearly anywhere (there are always some more successful than others; business owners, entrepreneurs, paid workers and homeless. It's like that nearly anywhere).
It's should be also noted that while nationwide inequality among western world countries is rising (all across the board), it's shrinking on a global level [1].
Sadly, the big problem with inequality is not "feelings of inadequacy". The problem is that wealth buys power and influence, both socially and politically. Thus increasing inequality means political power is increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few; and that usually leads to policies that will enhance and protect the lives of those few at the expense of everyone else.
Here's an idea a friend and I have been throwing around. It's probably terrible to be honest, so I'd love to hear why it's dumb.
Implement basic income, which HN is well aware of. But, instead of funding it entirely through income taxes, fund it primarily with what the Fed would call "Quantitative Easing" but what I will call "printing money."
Right now, I believe the Fed has actually made inequality much worse by printing a metric ton of money and pumping it into government and the financial sector. The hope is that this will, to use a loaded term, "trickle down" to everyday Americans. Instead, it seems there isn't much trickling.
So, why print money? Because it's a wealth tax. It's also the easiest tax to implement: you don't have to collect anything! No IRS. A huge amount of the US government would be gone: no more means testing government expenditures (benefits), no more tax collecting for revenue.
Printing money isn't a tax on wealth, it's a tax on dollar denominated wealth. If I have a $5 million dollar home and a $20 million dollar stock portfolio, and the dollar falls 2% tonight, tomorrow I probably have a (roughly) $5.1 million dollar home and $20.4 million dollar stock portfolio.
That said, I'm not convinced it's a terrible idea. What it would likely do is get businesses to stop sitting on cash reserves... if they do that by increasing production, that might lead good places. If they do it by fleeing into other assets, we'll just see the dollar crater. Increased demand expressed by those whose increase from the money they've been handed is less than their loss from inflation might mean that increasing production is the better move for them. I'm not sure I'd want to bet on it, though. Printing a portion of what is handed out (particularly in down times) seems less crazy.
QE carries the implicit promise that they will eventually stop it and destroy some of the money. This keeps a lid on inflation. Start printing money without that implicit promise and away we go with the inflation.
This article supports many of the common fallacies that accompany most discussions of "wealth inequality" - and as usual believes it should be rectified... (by whom?) For a refreshing point of view on this topic, read http://cafehayek.com/2014/01/wealth-is-not-a-glob-of-homogen... . It may not change your mind but it is certainly another way to think about the issue.
And where in that conception of things is the relief for the bottom 50-60% of the population? The main audience for this type of drivel seems to be wannabe entrepreneurs who want to believe they're on that straight and narrow to fortune, and deserve to be.
Funny how the Gilded Age, a pejorative term BTW, gets a bad rap because a few people got extremely rich. It was actually one on the most economically successful periods in US history. As pointed out by Wikipedia real wages were up 60% in 30 years despite a doubling in population including around 8 million very poor new immigrants.
For comparison we have had around 5% real wage growth over the past 40 years and are having difficulty absorbing a similar number of poor immigrants despite being almost 10 time more populous.
To paraphrase Santayana: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to be UNABLE to repeat it."
It's important to note that over time, wealth always gathers itself into a few hands. Money will flow to the rich because they're good at getting it to flow to them. That's why they're rich, duh. As they grow rich, any sensible person looking to sell something will try and sell it to the rich, because they have discretionary income. The problem is that the rich are good at making money flow to them (remember---that's why they're rich), and so most of what they buy are investments of some kind. Which means they make more money, etc.
In the past this has been mitigated by crazy amounts of philanthropy a la Carnegie or Rockefeller. I get the impression this is less so now, for two reasons. The first is that we're a more global culture, so philanthropy efforts go toward the third world rather than the third precinct. The second is that I suspect some of the rich feel persecuted by all this talk about the rich, and aren't kindly disposed towards donating their money to people who hate them. I'd love to hear recordings of Bill Gates's phone calls gone bad.
As for solutions: I don't know. One that I've been working on is better financial software for the common man (to run on a phone, rather than a PC); perhaps that will at least stop him from being suckered by predatory lending.
Basic income or negative income tax are great ideas: they're cheaper to administer than the current welfare state, are more humane (people are treated as adults and allowed to spend the basic income on whatever they wish), and avoid perverse incentives. With the current system, getting a job easily has the same impact as a 100% tax -- all benefits go away, all income goes goes to deal with lost benefits (and free time goes to -- given this is an entry-level and menial/service job -- an activity that's not intrinsically rewarding).
Yet, people have (initially surprising to me) visceral reactions against these proposals -- despite these proposals coming from all over the political map -- as unfair.
Jonathan Haidt has an excellent article on morality of fairness:
In short, individuals see fairness on a scale -- from "what people receive should be proportional to what they contribute" to "from each according to his ability, to each according their means".
It also makes sense to add a slightly more nuanced pole to this, namely "just desserts": "people should be able to keep everything that they earn, with the exception of fees for services they use and externalities they impose on others"; in other words, fairness concerns should also be balanced against negative liberty.
This could explain why there's such strong opposition to a basic income: significant chunk of the population people see it as less fair as opposed to more fair, another chunk views it as just another form of theft. It's also why many aren't easily bothered by supposed excesses of idleness of the rich, as long as the wealth was acquired legitimately. This isn't to endorse these views, but to acknowledge that these positions are sincerely held by individuals of all races, genders, and incomes.
This is also why many of the wealthy vote for politicians that (on paper) promise to reduce wealth inequality and one of the reasons why many of the poor vote for candidates that don't think inequality is a problem. In short, these are moral views as opposed to matters of rational self-interest.
Contrary to Marx not everyone is fighting for their class interests, contrary to popular view of economics (which is different from how economists actually see it) not everyone is trying to maximize their own net worth by any means possible. Economists say individuals try to maximize their utility, which to nearly all means -- to some extent -- wanting to see good in the world, but with their own definition of what is good.
So here's a proposal: when speaking on inequality and social justice, let's identify who the audience is, and justify policy proposals according to their values. If someone is a libertarian, address the negative effect concentration of wealth (which often begets political power) has on liberty (e.g., politicians buying their way into office to push Nanny state policies, wealthy funding campaigns that lead to criminalization of vice, etc...)
Likewise, if someone cares about proportionality, point out that labour theory of value is false: law of supply and demand means it's inevitable that people will get rich as result of sheer luck or doing something that seems trivial. That's not to mention that many of the wealthy are wealthy as result of rent-seeking -- and fight both rent-seeking and the inequality it leads to.
Otherwise, quite frankly, these ideas will remain dead in the water politically.
Edit: one thing that should be noted is that it's unlikely that in a free market (which is generally a good thing) wealth distribution will be anything other than power law (which isn't to say we can't smooth it out, but we can't turn it to a normal probability distribution). However, wealth isn't everything: why not divorce wealth from status (to the extent, we already do this)? For example, Silicon Valley (it's getting hard to use that term non-ironically, unfortunately) does tend to praise the value of individual contributors as well as that of entrepreneurs and managers, yet there's disconnect in mainstream culture -- where remaining an individual contributor (or even a mid-tier manager) is _not_ considered a successful outcome. This change will have to happen organically, of course.
> In short, individuals see fairness on a scale -- from "what people receive should be proportional to what they contribute" to "from each according to his ability, to each according their means".
Exactly, and fairness keeps getting shifted along this scale. Here's an example that comes to mind when I think of taxation: let's say you have a country of 1 million people, and with total government expenses of $1 billion/year. The first taxation idea that comes to mind (and perhaps the fairest) is that every citizen pays exactly $1000 each in taxes. Now some people are going to scream "that's no fair, some people don't make that much per year, you want them to starve?" So then the next idea is "how about everyone pays 10% instead, so rich people pay more in raw dollars, but everyone still pays the same percentage?" The reply becomes "but that's still not right, rich people can afford to pay much more". Eventually, you wind up with a progressive tax that tops at around 90%, and nobody thinks this is fair (all in the name of fairness).
Actually, I don't have a problem with top tax rates that high on say income over 10 million a year. People don't make 50 million a year living in a hut in the middle of nowhere. It's not as obvious as welfare, but without things like IP law and roads you just don't get that kind of concentrated wealth accumulation outside of warlords which are really just another form of government. People argue that it's bad for the economy, but the US has actually had significantly slower economic growth when the top tax rate was below 70% (1982 to now) than when it's above 70% (1936-1981).
My discussion was around "fairness". Do you think it's "fair"? Making some people pay more than others (unequal amounts) can be considered unfair (everyone paying exactly $X is also fair). Here's an analogy: when 5 friends go out for dinner, does the richest one pick up the tab, do they split it up equally, or does every individual pay for what he/she eats? You can argue that each of those options is "fair" in some way.
Depends, but a better (though still flawed) analogy is this: before dinner, everyone agreed and knew that if someone brought twice as much cash in their wallet to dinner, that person would pay more than everyone else but also get the best dish, the best view, and a massage while waiting for food to come out. And everyone had a chance to opt out of going to dinner before heading out, or to choose to not get all the perks.
Given that, it's sort of ridiculous for Fred to complain after dinner that he has to pay more than everyone else, and then to try to guilt trip them into paying an equal amount as him.
You seem to have completely missed the point of the scale described by strlen which is that people have different definitions of fairness and continued to argue that yours is the only one.
I would be very cautious drawing any firm conclusion from this kind of simplistic analysis.
First, as always with economic analysis, many other things are changing at the same time (inflation, trade, technology, etc.). Any one or some combination of other factors could actually be driving this and you would not know it. Additional event studies and evidence from other countries would be a start.
Second, you are effectively cherry picking your sample periods. 1936 was the very bottom of the Great Depression. Why don't we also look at the period before the US had income taxes, other countries, etc.
Third, tax rates are only one part of tax policy. Effective tax rates would be a start but then how to measure income when there is a big incentive to hide it.
Lastly and probably most importantly, what is the logic here. How exactly do high tax rates increase growth. It makes sense that they would reduce incentives. How much money would it raise? And if there is some great spending projects that increase growth why aren't we already doing them?
> People don't make 50 million a year living in a hut in the middle of nowhere.
They also are aware of other countries and venues to receive that income. While a poor schmuck getting his $15 mil bonus from AIG won't have anywhere to hide - we got him, anybody who has a choice of where the payments are made will choose a more accommodating tax regime.
There is a good Milton Friedman video wherein he explains why tax reform won't happen in the United States. The key is that the ideal goals of a tax system (e.g. generate lots of revenue with little inefficiency and little impact on taxpayers' personal financial situation and few unequally distributed loopholes like corporate tax avoidance) are not the goals of lawmakers who define the tax system.
In the video, he focuses on a theoretical tax system just like our current progressive income tax, but with all brackets >25% limited to 25%, and argues that it would be an improvement (according to ideal goals). But I think the argument could be extended to basic income or negative income tax, the latter of which Friedman also advocated.
> The key is that the ideal goals of a tax system (e.g. generate lots of revenue with little inefficiency and little impact on taxpayers' personal financial situation and few unequally distributed loopholes like corporate tax avoidance) are not the goals of lawmakers who define the tax system.
There are actually lots of viewpoints from which that set of "ideal goals" are not ideal.
And, of course, tax reform can happen with a different set of goals than Milton Friedman's ideals.
> In the video, he focuses on a theoretical tax system just like our current progressive income tax, but with all brackets >25% limited to 25%, and argues that it would be an improvement (according to ideal goals).
Well, if its just like our current system but for that change, the main difference will be a tax cut for high income earners and reduced revenue. That doesn't seem consistent with the so-called "ideal goals" set out earlier.
> There are actually lots of viewpoints from which that set of "ideal goals" are not ideal.
Perhaps, but I deliberately left the goals vague. I think they represent what an average taxpayer would think. Do you have any specific examples of other goals might be?
> Well, if its just like our current system but for that change, the main difference will be a tax cut for high income earners and reduced revenue.
In that video he specifically argues against that idea. He says revenue should increase, and one side effect would be that corporate declarations should increase since there is less financial incentive to find ways to "hide" income.
I'm not sure about that. 40% of hojillion dollars is more than 25% of hojillion dollars, but 25% of hojillion dollars is still plenty to hire a smart accountant.
No, that's not the point. The point is that lowering the tax rates on top earners changes the behavior of those top earners. I am not convinced that's true. If I can pay a team of accountants $1 million / year to hide $100 million, then whether it is taxed at 25% or 40%, I'm still as big a fool (or patriot) to hand over 24 million I don't have to as 39.
> No, that's not the point. The point is that lowering the tax rates on top earners changes the behavior of those top earners. I am not convinced that's true.
Why not? Do you think there is no limit on the amount a corporation would be willing to spend for each dollar they can remove from their tax declaration?
I think there is a limit. I even think it is below break-even, since they need to put in effort to go about it. I don't think it is clear at all that the proposed change pushes enough money past that limit. A big part of it depends on the structure of the costs of tax avoidance. Obviously, if every effective means of tax avoidance costs 30 cents on the dollar for any amount of money, lowering the rate from 40% to 25% would be hugely effective, though putting it at 29% would raise still more revenue. My position is that it's hugely unclear, and enough things have changed since Milton Friedman made those claims that it is open whether - even if he was correct at the time - they still hold true.
One way to make basic income work politically is make it conditional upon providing something other than the actual market value of said something, at least initially.
For example, the Earned Income Tax Credit in the U.S. already effectively creates negative taxes for certain people, but only if they have "earned" income. While this isn't as efficient as a pure negative income tax or basic income, it's a good start.
You could also try paying people a basic income for community service, voting, registering for the draft, etc.
Unfortunately once you start doing that it loses its appeal because its foundation has been ripped out from beneath it.
First you start with basic civic duties. Then there are the things that are a bit more problematic in principle but'd still have a broad base of support--denying it to murderers and pedophiles and then all of a sudden anyone who's been convicted of a felony. Then, whoah, anyone who's committed a misdemeanor, and then you've got to start pre-emptively giving drug tests to anyone who might want to claim it. And then you add in ideas like "well, if you're disabled or a civil servant you should get more" and "obviously if you're a billionaire you shouldn't get any," and then if you make seven figures, then six, then five. And then "well, people shouldn't be spending money on Obamaphones, let's make it so that only food and housing can be purchased with it." And then only certain kinds of food and certain kinds of housing, TBD by policymakers and the helpful white papers that corporations specializing in those areas are happy to provide for free.
And then at the end of it all you end up with the deeply broken welfare system we have now, one that encourages dependency, dehumanizes recipients, and incentivizes against work, while simultaneously throwing away huge gobs of social value through administrative costs and corruption.
The scenario you outline is pretty speculative. Moreover, we're assuming that a pure basic income is politically unpalatable. Given that constraint, I'd rather take a half-assed version over nothing at all.
Also, if you keep the narrative simple and consistent, and the initial base is broad enough, I think it can maintain its appeal. The message behind Social Security is that you're entitled to payments because you put money in initially -- even if you ultimately get out more than you put in. As such, it's proven to be surprisingly resilient to attempts to impose restrictions on it.
Likewise, because the EITC is administered through the tax system, which everyone participates in -- regardless of whether you're a felon or not. Because it's framed as a tax benefit that everyone is potentially eligible for, it's also held up surprisingly well.
Dan Ariely has written extensively on psychological research that involves paying people for various activity.
Paying immediately removes intrinsic benefit and self-motivation. If before you were (and considered yourself) a great sport for coaching a local kids' baseball league and volunteering at a library over the weekend, once the money enters the equation, you're just another chump trying to pull money out of the system, grinding at it before you can go home and relax.
That's an important point, and your general sketch is certainly correct, though I think you are overstating and overgeneralizing the research a little bit. (That said, I grant that it's certainly possible your understanding is more correct than mine.)
> One way to make basic income work politically is make it conditional upon providing something other than the actual market value of said something, at least initially.
That's called a "behaviorally conditioned social welfare program", and along with means-tested social welfare programs, its exactly the efficiency and administrative problem that unconditional basic income sets out to solve. That's not making basic income work politically, that's the exact thing that basic income is proposed in opposition to.
Would basic income make the society really more equal? I find it quite difficult to estimate how would it turn out in practice. Wouldn't a more nuanced system give better results?
First, it's a form of redistribution of wealth: assuming it's used with a progressive system of taxation.
I completely agree that we can't know how it will turn out in the long term (but why not try it and scrape it if it doesn't?), but the idea is that individuals could use the income to retrain when forced out of work, and to be able to provide an environment for their kids that give their them at least a chance at upwards mobility.
Again, I don't think it will lead to perfect equality. Nor is it a magic bullet: one pet-peeve is that everyone seems to be concerned with income, but less so with wealth per-se. Some people have proposed a tax on land itself but not improvements to land: I am not trained in economics so I can't speak to its efficacy (perhaps it's an outmoded idea today), but from a moral standpoint such a tax (with perhaps a "homestead exemption" for one's primary residence up to a certain value) seems a lot more fair than an income or property tax (which also taxes improvements to property that benefit the community).
The main problem I see is that basic income would require a much richer society. If you want to have a system that gives a livable income to all unemployed people PLUS gives a significant income bump if someone gets employed, you need lots of money.
Today, everyone consumes the necessary amount to survive. If they didn't, they'd be, well, dead. I guess the relevant point is that few people, at least in Western countries, are dying of starvation or exposure (and those who do usually have severe mental illness).
This means that even with the particular kinds of capital arranged in the particular way we do today, we can produce enough goods so that everyone consumes enough to survive. It's just a question of financing. Most people at the lower end end up financing the consumption either through personal debt or through imposing negative externalities on society, be it theft, drawing down the resources of friends or family, or soaking up charity dollars that could be more effectively used as capital investment. And personal debt just kicks the externalities toward the future, with the additional option of bankruptcy, which increases lending costs for all borrowers, itself a costly externality.
A basic income makes these externalities legible and puts the finances on the books instead of off of them. In addition it gives psychological security and improves the negotiating power of everyone.
The points you raise are good ones, but the question raised wasn't the cost of covering those at the bottom, it's the cost of also distributing it to the rest. Of course, if you couple basic income with an additional flat tax (that is, add X% to all tax brackets) that covers it, you would - net - be giving a lot of improvement to those at the bottom, asking a lot of money from those at the top, helping those just below the mean a little, and asking just a little more from those just above the mean. Of course, there's all the usual concerns around changes in tax rates (including tax evasion) still apply...
Of course but if you compare a basic income system with a more complex and nuanced system (ala developed world today) – and set both to the same level of redistribution – would the basic income lead to a more equal society?
It removes sharp cliffs as benefits are removed, which encourages work. It provides people the freedom to actually meet their most pressing needs (and allows competition to meet those needs cheaply and effectively) rather than the set of needs we guess will be most pressing. Those who, per their situation and opportunities and values, have better things to do will be more able to work less, which might make room for those who more need the opportunity - examples might be one spouse staying home to watch children and keep house, or someone pursuing their art or music, or volunteering at any of the remaining important causes.
All that is aside from the basic dynamic of "taking more money from those above the mean and giving more money to those below it" inherently pushing a bit toward more equality.
The catch is we already have several terrible systems of poorly and expensively providing basic income: abuse of SSDI and using food-stamps to buy goods to use as a de-facto currency (in West Virginia, it happens to be soda bottles, for example)
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense actually: basic income + no minimum wage (or if politically impossible, not raising minimum wage) -- since the basic income will continue even if someone is employed, it's a great incentive to stay to in the labour force and advance even if the pay is minimal.
I do think that Milton Friedman may not have foreseen the way automation might lead to at least long-term (but perhaps not permanent) structural unemployment.
When it comes to debating ideas the supporters of big-government/Communism/Socialism has lost the battle long back.
In modern times I see that these people have changed skins and they are not talking about "inequality" and "environment" as tools to counter mostly free market enterprise and small government arguments.
Eventually it all boils down to which policy would fetch more votes. Number of unproductive freeloaders in American society is probably increasing, there is tendency to look down upon the legal temporary job seekers in USA as job thieves depriving Americans of their jobs and we are told to be compassionate about the illegal migrants.
The vote bank in favor of taxing the productive and paying the unproductive is increasing at a rapid pace. Yes, it will bring equality where everyone will be poorer and no hope for future. (Note: Big ships take longer to sink, I have no doubt USA will continue to be a leader over next 20 years or so but the decline after that will be catastrophic).
These ideas (negative income tax/minimum income) have been proposed for decades by classical liberals / libertarians as a replacement to the welfare state, and (less often) as a supplement by progressives.
This distinction is critical. But, I'd wager that many libertarians (like myself) would happily match the total welfare spend + proposed minimum income on a per person basis as long as we cut out the middle-class bureaucrats and administrators.
It will be hard to reach consensus for the reasons Sam mentioned, but not impossible, since some elements are supported by otherwise diametrically opposed politics. I much prefer the debate be between libertarians & progressives (or even anarchists & socialists) than the center-left and center-right.
> But this still doesn’t address the fundamental issue—I believe most people want to be productive.
I'm not too worried about that people will be lazy or feel alienated due to not being productive. Science and Technology are not the only outlets for human creativity: my prediction is that we will see a flowering of the Arts and Recreation: more music, more writing, more painting, more sculpture, more sports & games etc. This will enhance all of our lives ..
As an aside, I think its a mistake to measure the delta in wealth distribution primarily in terms of assets. Technology, while increasing wealth disparity in measurable ways, often decreases it in immeasurable (and more important) ones: for example, wikipedia vs encyclopedia britannica.
> Technology makes wealth inequality worse by giving people leverage and compounding differences in ability and amount of work. It also often replaces human jobs with machines. A long time ago, differences in ability and work ethic had a linear effect on wealth; now its exponential.
This is a factor, but not much of one.
Let's see who is wealthy. The top ten of the Forbes 400 wealthiest Americans.
#1 Gates - grandfather ran a bank, and had a million dollar trust fund for him.
#2 Buffett - father a Congressman, grandparents owned a chain of stores
#3 Ellison - grew up middle class, self-made
#4 Koch - inherited oil company
#5 Koch - inherited oil company
#6 Walton - inherited Walmart
#7 Walton - inherited Walmart
#8 Walton - inherited Walmart
#9 Walton - inherited Walmart
#10 Bloomberg - grew up middle class, self-made
The incubi hovering over Silicon Valley are the limited partners whom VCs raise money from. Like the Forbes 400 list, or like the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, most of the wealth is inherited.
I've sat next to too many Chinese and Indian guys, running the whole show for some Fortune 500 company in terms of their databases, storage, or some programming group, who were on H1-B visas and making a pittance and living in a small apartment in some crappy neighborhood to think that "work ethic" and "ability" is what is making all the money. These people not only have a work ethic (like many in society), they also have the technical ability. They have the ability and they're using the ability. And making nothing.
Those who get wealthy expropriating the surplus labor time profits of we workers who work and create wealth - they are the ones who are benefiting, not the "hard working" or "able". Watch the documentary "Born Rich" by one of their tribe. How many of the people interviewed their have the ability to know which data structure is proper for a certain project? Or how to set up BGP connections on a Cisco router? And so forth. They are benefiting due to the new technology, but it is they who benefit, the hard working able people building and implementing these things are getting scraps from the table.
While GDP per capita has risen over the past decades, inflation-adjusted wages per hour have fallen. Things have gotten better for those who do not work, and worse for those who do work and create wealth.
The only answer from those who parasitically expropriate profits from the surplus time of those of us who work and create wealth is this - "spend more of your time studying math. Go into debt to pay for college and spend four years paying for your own job training. Then you might live as well as your parents did, who did not have to do these things (or who would live better than you ever will by doing these things."
Ultimately an economic system built on this has too many self-contradictions. Once you drain all the spare money from the average worker, no one has any money to buy the things these companies make. They can go into debt, but that just kicks the can down the road and makes the ultimate crash work.
In fact Sam Altman's business, Green Dot, is predicated on this new reality. Poor people don't have the credit to get credit cards, so they go to Green Dot and get charged exorbinant amounts of money. His business is one of the heaviest into the transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich.
Precisely. Most intelligent people understand very quickly that it isn't their technical ability that will make them wealthy, but the ability to commandeer the technical ability of others at the lowest possible price. Hence, the H1-B, or voluntary indentured servitude with the carrot of a green card.
Why does this perpetuate? Informational asymmetry aided by naive hope, marketing, and desperation. The "American Dream" is the most viral marketing campaign in the history of mankind, spread by Hollywood around the globe. As such, there's a never-ending lineup of suckers waiting to take the plunge.
Poor people don't have the credit to get credit cards, so they go to Green Dot and get charged exorbinant [sic] amounts of money. His business is one of the heaviest into the transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich.
This is a bit unfair to Green Dot. First of all I don't think their fees are that high. Secondly it's not their fault that most merchants and services expect everyone to have a bank account and nineteen credit cards. That didn't used to be the case, and eliminating credit cards would do much more to help the poor than eliminating Green Dot.
I think health care and education should absorb the misplaced workers. The demand for those services is infinite and there should (in theory) always be incremental value created by additional workers (assume their salaries were 0; they would be paid for by the government instead of the employing institution).
Why not more painters, musicians, dancers, authors, athletes etc? I think the demand for those is far more elastic than for health care & education, esp. in the face of technology.
How great would the world be if every 10th person was a comedian, a juggler, a jester or a magician. We could really have performers livening up every street, and they would be well fed and housed.
Imagine more time for recreation, more time for bonding with our fellow man, for playing with our children and our grandparents, more time to travel the world, and one day the universe. I think that is the great promise of technology, that it will give us humans more time to enjoy being human.
I'm not sure that's true. By the same argument, you might say that free vaccines would encourage overpopulation, but (according to Bill Gates at least) the data shows the opposite:
Most implementations of basic income actually taper off as your income increases so the cost doesn't have to be adults_in_us*basic_income, but actually significantly less.
It would probably be possible to support a basic income system just by getting rid of existing entitlements (although that is a big 'just')
No. Basic incomes, by definition, do not taper off. That's what makes them so compelling to economists: schemes that do taper off create steep marginal disincentives to work. Tapering off is the type of thing that sounds appealing--why give multimillionaires a regular check?--but it's a bad idea.
(The name for the policies that do include that tapering off is a guaranteed minimum income, not a basic income.)
Thanks for the clarification, I did not realize the two were different.
> Schemes that do taper off create steep marginal disincentives to work
There is no reason the marginal disincentives need to be steep. You could otherwise make the same argument about progressive income taxes. Those don't seem to disincentivize people from making more money, neither does guaranteed minimum income need to.
I can and do make the same argument about progressive income taxes =) And, to be totally clear about my perspective, I believe all taxes on income are taxes that disincentive work and are economically destructive.
It's not an on-or-off switch: you've got to look at the margins. At the margin, you'll work less if you get $100 in return for an hour's labor than if you get $200 in return for it. Maybe still more than half as much work, but you'll still decrease the amount of labor you perform. Income taxes do exactly that.
It's possible to make the marginal disincentives less steep, but the more you do that, the more you lose the cost savings you were hunting for in the first place.
E.g. imagine a basic income of $20k. And suppose you make it phase out such that at $40k you don't get one. That amounts to a whopping 50% marginal tax rate. And that tax rate is on top of existing taxes, and it's not hard to end up with a result where someone making $30k/year is paying a 75% marginal tax rate. Which is much too high for anyone making so little.
So let's try spreading it out. If it phases out at $60k, that's a 33% marginal tax rate; $80k is 25%; $100k is 20%. That's much better, though still a significant tax. But you've also made the guaranteed minimum income much closer in cost structure to a simple basic income. At least 90% of individuals make less than $100k, and their average per capita income is probably below $40k (remember we're cutting out the long tail that accounts for a large percentage of income). So we're paying out around $12k to each of them on average; and since we cut out the people making above $100k, that's around $11k per person, 55% the direct financial cost of a basic income.
Cheaper, definitely, but you're still going to face sticker shock. And you've paid for the cheapness in the disincentives due to taxes; administrative costs; and in creating incentives to misreport income.
Your ideal wealth distribution is that everyone has the exact same amount of wealth? Next you're going to be telling me some animals are more equal than others...
Meta, but I cannot believe this excellently written post has already dropped from the front page, while some bullshit about "suhvuhbtle" and medium is still sitting in the top spots for hours. Like ever more hip ways for echo-chamber attention-seekers to share their amazing epiphanies about productivity with each other, is so much more interesting than poverty.
To me this misses the point. The problem is not inequality, the problem is poverty. If everyone had enough that their basic needs were met and they were not struggling to survive, the fact that some people can afford Lamborghinis and some cannot would not be unjust in my opinion.
Without inequality, there are no Elon Musks. Bootstrapping SpaceX and Tesla required more than 1/6,000,000,000'th of the world's resources. Big results require investment, and it's not practical to crowdfund a multi-million dollar investment. So who should we entrust to make big bets? Doesn't it only make sense that the people who have already been the most successful in creating wealth should have the freedom to take that wealth to try out new ideas?
Inequality is not the problem. Poverty is the problem. Lack of access to education is the problem. We should strive to see that everyone can focus on improving their life and doing interesting things without struggling to survive. And if the most successful people take their spoils and build a 150-foot yacht, or take a ride into space, or invest in the next big company, more power to them.