By Timothy Noah
"In this comprehensive, fair-minded, and lucid account, based on his
award-winning articles for Slate, New Republic columnist Noah examines
growing income inequality in the U.S., where for 33 years, the wealthy
have acquired a growing share of the nationas income while the middle
class saw its share shrink. Noah synthesizes work by economists,
sociologists, and political scientists to explain the phenomenon to
nonexperts. He shows how income inequality first came to be measured in
the early 20th century, and relates the perspectives of scholars and
politicians at a time when the share of the nationas income going to the
wealthy either shrank or remained stable during the 1930s through the
late 1970s, before powerfully reversing course in the 1980s. Noah
studies the contributing factors (immigration, the shortage of
better-educated workers, trade with low-wage nations, globalization, the
fall of the labor movement, and government policy), and considers the
vast changes in the corporate and financial industry that led to a
agrossly misshapena wage structure, where a CEO now makes 262 times more
than the average worker. While this affects many industrialized
democracies, income inequality is far greater in the U.S., resulting in a
less upwardly mobile society. Noah makes a convincing and passionate
case for why rising inequality harms a working democracy, and suggests
sensible, though not always politically viable, solutions." (Publishers Weekly) Check Our Catalog
Current Affairs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment