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Rethinking the Income Gap - The Second Middle Class Revolution (Paperback)
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Rethinking the Income Gap - The Second Middle Class Revolution (Paperback)
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The ethical question implied by discreparcies between the
distribution of income and the economic foundations of our country
is at the heart of much of today's political debate. The answer
according to the left and often the mainstream media would require
major changes in the way our economy functions so as to further
redistribute income among households. Higher tax rates on the upper
middle class and rich, more restrictive corporate regulations
(including higher taxes), more centralized economic planning, in
short more governmental intervention into the free market, would
all be in our future and their deleterious effects would soon begin
working their way into American life, according to Paul Ryscavage
in Rethinking the Income Gap. This book is written by an economist
who has spent his career studying and analyzing income inequality.
News reports of mushrooming fortunes, most recently among CEOs and
hedge fund managers, alongside reports of a struggling middle class
and an intractable poverty class, have been common topics for the
nation's media. Ryscavage asserts that the media has misused many
of the facts surrounding the increase in income inequality. He
calls for a reexamination of the facts and what they mean and do
not mean and ultimately shows that, contrary to media reports,
income inequality can no longer be used as a measure of economic
fairness. He also writes that, notwithstanding the economic
downturn of 2008, the "real" news that the media have not reported
is the expansion in recent decades of our nation's middle class,
especially the upper middle class. Ryscavage argues that we must
reexamine what the income gap means. Its relevance as a measure of
economic fairness has diminished significantly in recent years.
Instead, the income gap is now linked to a variety of economic
problems confronting the nation and used as a rhetorical device for
stirring up social concern and advancing political agendas.
Rethinking the income gap is overdue. This book does just that.
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