A lot of people have been suggesting lately that the problem of income inequality is insoluble. “’Is the rise in inequality inevitable?” George Mason economist Tyler Cowan asks on NPR, touting his new book, Average Is Over. “It probably is.” Fortune’s Adam Lashinsky observes that “No one seems to have any good suggestions.” Harvard economist Greg Mankiw tells Thomas Edsall of The New York Times, “The question for public policy is what, if anything, to do about it.” Judging from Mankiw’s recent paper, “Defending The One Percent,” his own answer would be: nothing.
But actually, there’s quite a lot America can do to reverse growing income inequality. Whole books have been written proposing solutions. But the trend is getting worse under President Barack Obama—the first chief executive, ironically, to address the issue head-on since incomes started growing more unequal 34 years ago. “The problem that we’ve got right now is you’ve got a portion of Congress who–whose policies don’t just–want to– you know, leave things alone, they actually want to accelerate these trends,” the president replied when asked about this by ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos.
Classic Washington blame-shifting, right? But in this instance, Obama’s assertion is demonstrably true, as even a cursory glance at the inequality data demonstrates.
Stephanopoulos raised the issue by making reference to a recent finding by Berkeley economist Emmanuel Saez that 95% of all economic gains since the Great Recession formally ended in 2009 have gone to the top 1%. (In 2012, the last year for which data are available, the top 1% was every household that earned more than $394,000.) “Do you look at that, four and a half years in,” Stephanopoulos queried, “and say, ‘Maybe a president just can’t stop this accelerating inequality?’” Obama demurred. “I think the president can stop it,” he said.
What Obama should have added, but didn’t, was: “I have slowed it down.”
Most obviously, the rate at which the 1% is hogging recovery dollars has declined. Granted, 95% remains a grotesquely large share for the 1%. But one year before–that is, through 2011 rather than through 2012—Saez calculated the 1%’s share of recovery dollars at a seemingly-impossible 121%, which is another way of saying that incomes went up for the 1% and down for the 99%. Through 2012, the 1%’s income grew faster, but at least the 99%’s income grew, too (albeit at the paltry rate of 0.4%).
Another way to measure income inequality–less effective at calculating accumulation at the very top, but better at calculating the divergence between, say, people with college degrees and people without–is the Gini index. Imagine that you have a bag of marbles to distribute to a kindergarten class. If every child has an equal number of marbles, the Gini index is zero. If one particularly obnoxious child bullies all the other children into handing over all their marbles, the Gini index is 1. In 2011 the Gini index for U.S. incomes logged its biggest annual increase since 1993, jumping from 0.470 to 0.477. But in 2012, the Gini index was unchanged at 0.477, according to just-released data from the Census Bureau. It would be easy to make too much of this since increases in the Gini index are usually too small to make a measurable difference within a single year. But the rapid rise from 2010 to 2011 was halted in 2012.
President Obama’s policies had an impact on all this, as did policies pursued by Congress and the Federal Reserve. But an important limitation on the Saez and Census numbers—one that Stephanopoulos gave no sign of knowing—is that they do not take into account the direct redistribution that the government performs through taxation and through government benefits like Social Security, Medicare, and various forms of income support for the poor. Saez’s and the Census’ data measure only market income as reported to the Internal Revenue Service in Saez’s case and to a government survey in the Census’ case. And because the GOP militates incessantly to lower taxes and reduce government benefits, the president is quite right to say that their policies would accelerate inequality.









