As debate rages over the widening and destructive gap between
the rich and the rest of Americans, Claude Fischer and his
colleagues present a comprehensive new treatment of inequality in
America. They challenge arguments that expanding inequality is the
natural, perhaps necessary, accompaniment of economic growth. They
refute the claims of the incendiary bestseller "The Bell Curve"
(1994) through a clear, rigorous re-analysis of the very data its
authors, Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray, used to contend
that inherited differences in intelligence explain inequality.
"Inequality by Design" offers a powerful alternative explanation,
stressing that economic fortune depends more on social
circumstances than on IQ, which is itself a product of society.
More critical yet, patterns of inequality must be explained by
looking beyond the attributes of individuals to the structure of
society. Social policies set the "rules of the game" within which
individual abilities and efforts matter. And recent policies have,
on the whole, widened the gap between the rich and the rest of
Americans since the 1970s.
Not only does the wealth of individuals' parents shape their
chances for a good life, so do national policies ranging from labor
laws to investments in education to tax deductions. The authors
explore the ways that America--the most economically unequal
society in the industrialized world--unevenly distributes rewards
through regulation of the market, taxes, and government spending.
It attacks the myth that inequality fosters economic growth, that
reducing economic inequality requires enormous welfare
expenditures, and that there is little we can do to alter the
extent of inequality. It also attacks the injurious myth of innate
racial inequality, presenting powerful evidence that racial
differences in achievement are the consequences, not the causes, of
social inequality. By refusing to blame inequality on an
unchangeable human nature and an inexorable market--an excuse that
leads to resignation and passivity--"Inequality by Design" shows
how we can advance policies that widen opportunity for all.
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