Wiseacre
Retired USAF Chief
Income inequality and the education of Jonathan Chait « The Enterprise Blog
snippet:
1. Research by Northwestern University professor Robert Gordon, generally a liberal fave, finds that not only has the increase of inequality been exaggerated, but it has ceased. The excess growth of mean relative to median income reversed itself after 2000. But maybe he is somehow saying just the opposite, that it has actually not ceased. Weird, that.
2. And Gordonwho, in all fairness, does think incomes are more unequal today than a generation agohas this to say about supposedly stagnant middle-class wages: Correcting the upward bias of the official [consumer price index] adds more than 1 percent per year to official estimates of the growth in median and mean wages. Cumulatively since 1977, my best estimate of the upward bias in the CPI cumulates to 38 percent between 1977 and 2006.
3. In a blockbuster, the blog Political Calculations finds that there has been absolutely no meaningful change in the inequality of individual income earners in the years from 1994 through 2010. It would seem then that the real complaint of such people isnt about rising income inequality, but rather, how people choose to group themselves together into their families and households.
4. Brand-new research from University of Chicagos Bruce Meyer and Notre Dames James Sullivan, who find that median income and consumption both rose by more than 50 percent in real terms between 1980 and 2009.
5. A 2008 paper by Christian Broda and John Romalis from the University of Chicago documents how traditional measures of inequality ignore how inflation affects the rich and poor differently: Inflation of the richest 10 percent of American households has been 6 percentage points higher than that of the poorest 10 percent over the period 19942005. This means that real inequality in America, if you measure it correctly, has been roughly unchanged.
snippet:
1. Research by Northwestern University professor Robert Gordon, generally a liberal fave, finds that not only has the increase of inequality been exaggerated, but it has ceased. The excess growth of mean relative to median income reversed itself after 2000. But maybe he is somehow saying just the opposite, that it has actually not ceased. Weird, that.
2. And Gordonwho, in all fairness, does think incomes are more unequal today than a generation agohas this to say about supposedly stagnant middle-class wages: Correcting the upward bias of the official [consumer price index] adds more than 1 percent per year to official estimates of the growth in median and mean wages. Cumulatively since 1977, my best estimate of the upward bias in the CPI cumulates to 38 percent between 1977 and 2006.
3. In a blockbuster, the blog Political Calculations finds that there has been absolutely no meaningful change in the inequality of individual income earners in the years from 1994 through 2010. It would seem then that the real complaint of such people isnt about rising income inequality, but rather, how people choose to group themselves together into their families and households.
4. Brand-new research from University of Chicagos Bruce Meyer and Notre Dames James Sullivan, who find that median income and consumption both rose by more than 50 percent in real terms between 1980 and 2009.
5. A 2008 paper by Christian Broda and John Romalis from the University of Chicago documents how traditional measures of inequality ignore how inflation affects the rich and poor differently: Inflation of the richest 10 percent of American households has been 6 percentage points higher than that of the poorest 10 percent over the period 19942005. This means that real inequality in America, if you measure it correctly, has been roughly unchanged.