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Kathianne
12-20-2011, 02:17 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/obamas-simplistic-view-of-income-inequality/2011/12/19/gIQAeVmR5O_story.html


Obama’s simplistic view of income inequality By Charles Lane (http://www.washingtonpost.com/charles-lane/2011/02/28/ABeqisM_page.html), Published: December 19 Statistics show rising income inequality in the United States. But, contrary to the impression created by the Occupy protests, and media coverage thereof (http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/rightly-targeting-income-inequality/2011/12/07/gIQAGP7ZdO_story.html), statistics also show that Americans worry less about inequality than they used to.


In a Dec. 16 Gallup poll (http://www.gallup.com/poll/151568/Americans-Prioritize-Growing-Economy-Reducing-Wealth-Gap.aspx), 52 percent of Americans called the rich-poor gap “an acceptable part of our economic system.” Only 45 percent said it “needs to be fixed.” This is the precise opposite of what Gallup found in 1998, the last time it asked the question, when 52 percent wanted to “fix” inequality.


Maybe Americans are Okunites — as in Arthur Okun, the late Yale economist and author of the 1975 book, “Equality and Efficiency: The Big Tradeoff.”

(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0815764766/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=slatmaga-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0815764766%22%3EEquality%20and%20Effi ciency:%20The%20Big%20Tradeoff)

Okun saw free markets as a source of unparalleled human progress — and of big gaps between rich and poor. Indeed, he argued, markets are efficient partly because they distribute economic rewards unevenly.

Government should try to smooth out income stratification, but such efforts risk undermining incentives to work and invest.


Hence the “big trade-off”: channeling income from rich to poor, Okun wrote, was like trying to carry water in a leaky bucket. He wanted to move money from rich to poor without “leaking” so much economic growth that the whole process became self-defeating.


The American public intuitively shares Okun’s concerns. Consider the responses to another question in the Gallup poll. Asked to rate the importance of alternative federal policies, the public saw both economic growth and redistribution as worthy objectives — but put the former well ahead of the latter. Some 82 percent said growth was either “extremely” or “very” important; only 46 percent said “reduc[ing] the income and wealth gap between rich and poor” was “extremely” or “very” important.


In short, the public wants fairness but retains a healthy skepticism about the federal government’s ability to achieve it...

ConHog
12-20-2011, 02:21 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/obamas-simplistic-view-of-income-inequality/2011/12/19/gIQAeVmR5O_story.html



I don't guess I've ever worried about what others have.Some of these goobers act like there is a finite amount of wealth in this world and that anyone can actually horde it all . No matter how much richer someone is then you, you can still get yours if you're willing to work for it.

fj1200
12-20-2011, 11:15 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/obamas-simplistic-view-of-income-inequality/2011/12/19/gIQAeVmR5O_story.html

Interesting he references the 90's. I recall Clinton's tax beef back in '93 was corporate deduction of executive salary. They eliminated deductibility of compensation over $1mm which resulted in lower salaries but a shift to stock options. My guess is that directly led to increasing income inequality.

Kathianne
12-20-2011, 11:17 PM
Interesting he references the 90's. I recall Clinton's tax beef back in '93 was corporate deduction of executive salary. They eliminated deductibility of compensation over $1mm which resulted in lower salaries but a shift to stock options. My guess is that directly led to increasing income inequality.

I hadn't thought of that, you may be right on that.

fj1200
12-20-2011, 11:25 PM
I hadn't thought of that, you may be right on that.

Even when I'm guessing I'm right. ;)

:laugh:


...
At a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Wednesday, Cox and Public Company Accounting Oversight Board Chairman Mark Olson contended that federal tax code Section 162(m) unintentionally sparked a trend in the mid-1990s for companies to get more creative with incentives for their executives. A popular way to circumvent a tax penalty on executives' compensation has been to offer stock options, which aren't restricted under the tax code sections if the options are granted at fair market value. That has led some companies— more than 100 of which are under investigation by the SEC—to boost individual profits and executive pay by changing the date a stock-option was granted or exercised.

"One of the most significant reasons that non-salary forms of compensation have ballooned since the early 1990s is the $1 million legislative cap on salaries for certain top public company executives that was added to the Internal Revenue Code in 1993," Cox testified.
...
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/7880253/c_7932402