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Over the past 75 years, household income in the United States has
increased substantially. Still, by some measures, income inequality
has increased as well. This has been the subject of contested
public policy and political discourse. The question still stands:
How can we better articulate the nuanced changes in American
incomes? It is difficult to have conversations about income
inequality without an agreed-upon set of terms, metrics, and
concepts. United States Income, Wealth, Consumption, and
Inequality, edited by Diana Furchtgott-Roth, examines the trends in
income growth in the United States and explores various measures of
income, including market, post-tax, and post-transfer income.
Within each chapter, distinguished experts explain how income and
wealth-and the way we measure them-have changed in the United
States, which demographic groups have benefited from these changes,
and how mobility has changed over time and over generations.
Specific chapters explain the roles of gender and race. The
resulting book is relevant to modern international policy,
particularly in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, and addresses what
can be done to increase economic mobility in the United States.
Overcoming Barriers to Entrepreneurship compiles academic
discussions of real and perceived barriers to the founding and
running of small businesses in America. Each chapter illustrates
how policy and economic environment can hinder business owners, and
suggests what can be done to help them. Starting with venture
capital access in Silicon Valley during the Internet bubble, the
book goes on to question the link between personal wealth and
entrepreneurship, to investigate how federal tax rates effect
small-business creation and destruction, to explain the low rate of
self-employment among Mexican immigrants, and to suggest how
pension coverage can be increased in small businesses. Concluding
with an attempt to qualify what makes an entrepreneur, Overcoming
Barriers to Entrepreneurship argues that policymakers need not
create incentives for entrepreneurs to create new businesses,
though there is a great deal they can do to encourage entrepreneurs
by removing legal and economic roadblocks to business creation.
Overcoming Barriers to Entrepreneurship compiles academic
discussions of real and perceived barriers to the founding and
running of small businesses in America. Each chapter illustrates
how policy and economic environment can hinder business owners, and
suggests what can be done to help them. Starting with venture
capital access in Silicon Valley during the Internet bubble, the
book goes on to question the link between personal wealth and
entrepreneurship, to investigate how federal tax rates effect
small-business creation and destruction, to explain the low rate of
self-employment among Mexican immigrants, and to suggest how
pension coverage can be increased in small businesses. Concluding
with an attempt to qualify what makes an entrepreneur, Overcoming
Barriers to Entrepreneurship argues that policymakers need not
create incentives for entrepreneurs to create new businesses,
though there is a great deal they can do to encourage entrepreneurs
by removing legal and economic roadblocks to business creation.
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