Wealth & Income Inequality

So in the past few pages we've got:

"He said from an iPhone *smirk*"
"Wealth is infinite"
"You're just mad because you cant get rich"
"Are we supposed to believe that you care about other humans?"


checkmate lefties
 
3. A company's primary purpose is profit (irrespective of whether it is located in a capitalistic or a communist country). I'd put the primary ownership to take care of societal needs on the government rather than companies. The same country which gave America a environmentally friendly Obama has now given us a Trump who is hostile to this cause. This attitude of the nation towards this has little to no relevance to the economic model, capitalism or communism.

Okay this is very important. You do see the problem with a society having things such as healthcare reliant on companies whose primary purpose is profit.
Now we are getting somewhere because this is leading into areas where policies that could be implemented now can begin to redress the problems with growing income inequality and the limitation of opportunities. So you would support universal healthcare, expanded public education, no more private prisons and reduced reliance on overpriced government defense contractors that rip off tax payers yes?
 
and if people's wages aren't growing at least at the same pace or higher, it's of no consolation to majority of people, and wages have been stagnant for decades because the extremely wealthy are hoarding bigger and bigger amounts of the wealth that has been created

You should be blaming that minimum wages and tax codes for that. Not Amazon.
 
let's do america since most of the people talked about here are americans
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/an...-current-cost-living-compare-20-years-ago.asp


why? price of buying things has outpaced wage growth which is stagnant

Now we're going places. Full disclosure: I'm vehemently opposed to the current monetary setup for rather similar arguments to the ones you've just made. That said, inflation is not a natural consequence of the market economy - it's a choice.

However, if you read the article you posted closely, it actually tells you that inflation isn't actually out pacing wage growth at all:

he same method can be applied to see if household incomes have similarly increased. The median household income in 1998 was $38,885. The most recent year with full data available is 2017, so adjusting for inflation as of that year gives a median income of $58,487. The Bureau of Census reports that the actual median 2017 income was $59,000 – higher than the adjusted figure, but not by very much, and certainly nowhere near the percentage that prices have outpaced inflation.

And that, for example the price of fuel, has increased way above what you would expect from inflation alone (suggesting taxes are probably playing a big part).
 
Okay this is very important. You do see the problem with a society having things such as healthcare reliant on companies whose primary purpose is profit.
Now we are getting somewhere because this is leading into areas where policies that could be implemented now can begin to redress the problems with growing income inequality and the limitation of opportunities. So you would support universal healthcare, expanded public education, no more private prisons and reduced reliance on overpriced government defense contractors that rip off tax payers yes?

I'm with you on healthcare. I'm not fully versed in intricacies of this field, but still have a starting opinion that this should be Government owned with profit being a secondary objective. Yeah, in general, I'd support the things you mention.
 
Are we expected to believe that you just have complete compassion for dumb people?

See. You & @Eboue are two of the nastiest, most bitter people on this whole website. When the same argument comes from the two of you, who only ever want to penalize, punish and control everyone else who is by any measure deemed a success, you really need to step back and realize that the arguments you keep making are saying more about your own characters (or lack of) than anything else. It's a good job for mankind that posts on a forum will be the most influential either of you will ever be.
 
Now we're going places. Full disclosure: I'm vehemently opposed to the current monetary setup for rather similar arguments to the ones you've just made. That said, inflation is not a natural consequence of the market economy - it's a choice.

However, if you read the article you posted closely, it actually tells you that inflation isn't actually out pacing wage growth at all:



And that, for example the price of fuel, has increased way above what you would expect from inflation alone (suggesting taxes are probably playing a big part).
the very bit you quoted also says that prices have outpaced inflation, that's a higher cost of living than as little as 20 years ago
 
See. You & @Eboue are two of the nastiest, most bitter people on this whole website. When the same argument comes from the two of you, who only ever want to penalize, punish and control everyone else who is by any measure deemed a success, you really need to step back and realize that the arguments you keep making are saying more about your own characters (or lack of) than anything else. It's a good job for mankind that posts on a forum will be the most influential either of you will ever be.

So its nasty for Silva to imply you are dumb (I didnt, I think you are reasonably intelligent but you don't care about people other than yourself) yet a few posts up you implied I was dumb "perhaps it was too sophisticated for you to grasp".
 
See. You & @Eboue are two of the nastiest, most bitter people on this whole website. When the same argument comes from the two of you, who only ever want to penalize, punish and control everyone else who is by any measure deemed a success, you really need to step back and realize that the arguments you keep making are saying more about your own characters (or lack of) than anything else. It's a good job for mankind that posts on a forum will be the most influential either of you will ever be.
It's hard to believe you have read that much of our stuff or really understand what we are saying at all if that's what you really think, with the greatest of respect.
 
the very bit you quoted also says that prices have outpaced inflation, that's a higher cost of living than as little as 20 years ago

Sound. Then all you need to do is lobby your legislators to remove some of those taxes that are forcing an increase to prices above the inflation rate and you're all good. :drool:
 
I do blame the laws. The laws that sociopaths like Jeff Bezos force cities and states to adopt if they want his business. It's possible to blame multiple things for something.

Capital subverts democracy to make laws and tax codes in their favor. Heres an example of Amazon doing it last month.

http://fortune.com/2018/06/12/amazon-just-killed-a-tax-that-helps-homeless-people/

The economic benefit of having a company like Amazon to the local economy is immense.

Let me quote from the same article you linked here

The law as passed would have brought in $275 per employee at businesses grossing at least $20 million in Seattle, and would have cost Amazon about $12.5 million in 2019. The company made $1.6 billion in profit in the first quarter of 2018, but in a leak to the local newspaper during the head-tax debate, the firm said it already pays about $250 million in local and state taxes, including business taxes and sales tax for its own purchases, exclusive of any sales tax it collects for Washington on goods and services Amazon sells its customers.

Amazon also contributes heavily in cash and goods to Farestart, which delivers free meals and trains people in difficulty for restaurant jobs, and Mary’s Place, a non-profit that provides transitional housing to several hundred people, primarily women and their families. In May 2017, the company committed to building and permanently donating 47,000 square feet to Mary’s Space in a building near the one it froze and then resumed construction on. In its statement after the vote, the company also highlighted these two charities.

Though the head tax was clearly aimed at Amazon, the city’s largest employer and office tenant by far, it would have also swept in the employees of grocery stores and the daily Seattle Times to raise about $47 million in 2019 for homeless programs.

I'm confused. Despite the clickbait title, the article seems to elaborate on why this was a poor ill thought out tax that does more harm than good. If the state can't help the poor with $250m in taxes it received, I doubt an extra $12m would make a difference. And this seems to cover grocery stores etc, which looks very dumb even from a superficial read.

and the finally...

Amazon was founded in Seattle, and has received little local largesse of the kind companies bringing large projects or numbers of jobs negotiate for.
 
@oneniltothearsenal you referring to this?

The fundamental flaw in the argument is treating Capitalism as form or govt (instead of Democracy) rather than a socioeconomic modal. Fine line, but distinctly separate.

I think you are sort-of on the right track here. The fundamental flaw is that government has been co-opted by corporate special interests. Government has been systemically stripped of its societal role by an intentional effort to instead manipulate government to further special interests (we see this in the money grabs from the Savings and Loan to Clinton signing the FSMA and CFMA that directly led to the financial deregulations that caused the mortgage backed securities recession).

You have influential people in a capitalist form of govt who support green policy and environmental concerns....as many as those who deny them. It would not be fair to make an argument stating capitalism is the cause we do not tackle global warming. A communist China having as much pollution and factories is as much to blame as any other capitalist country.

One of the problems is the lies of the Republican rhetoric. They haven't actually represented "small government" for decades but instead represented a form of corporate-socialism. Use government to give gifts to favored companies and then sell that as 'de-regulation'. For instance they kept hammering any government subsidy for green energy for years all the while ignoring that US government has always heavily subsidized the oil and gas industries.
https://www.nrdc.org/experts/danielle-droitsch/time-us-end-fossil-fuel-subsidies

This goes back to the above point that the nuanced problem is that government has been co-opted to line the pockets of certain special interests.
Another pet issue that I have followed for 20 years is how the mid-west corn farmers have used their political influence to literally force California to use their pointless midwest corn ethanol for California's fuel formula. https://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/12/us/bush-to-insist-on-ethanol-use-in-california.html

Of course in the cases of real de-regulation like financial services products we saw the direct result of that myth in 2006-2010.

The fact of the matter is the system incentives heavily favor the already rich. Just look at the unfair difference in earned income tax rate and unearned income (mostly applies to multi-millionaires and the leisure class who live off investments that may but often do not actually benefit the economy overall). Mitt Romney and Donald Trump should not be paying less taxes than a struggling general practitioner, veteran teacher or firefighter. Period.

The economy would function better for everyone if less much less inequality than currently exists in America. We are starting to approach levels unseen since the Roaring 20s and that predicts a very harsh correction:

15.-Wealth-Shares-2-e1455659383123.jpg
 
The economic benefit of having a company like Amazon to the local economy is immense.

Let me quote from the same article you linked here



I'm confused. Despite the clickbait title, the article seems to elaborate on why this was a poor ill thought out tax that does more harm than good. If the state can't help the poor with $250m in taxes it received, I doubt an extra $12m would make a difference. And this seems to cover grocery stores etc, which looks very dumb even from a superficial read.

and the finally...
Now imagine how much better it would be if gigantic corporations didn't have the power to demand special treatment and if cities and states weren't desperate to be the one who gets this or that boost. Because there would be a lot more of that wealth to go around more regions, cities and countries if it wasn't concentrated in the hands of a handful of companies and people.
 
None of that is relevant to the point. Amazon subverted democracy to get the result they wanted. So "dont blame amazon, change the laws" is a meaningless thing to say.
I thought that was an odd comment. Given how corporations and lobbyists can grab legislators by the balls especially in America.
 
For more a more detailed explanation you can try Capital In The Twenty First Century. Just because you choose not to read and learn about these things doesn't mean they arent happening. There are more things in heaven and earth Horatio

Maybe you should read the critical reviews of it. Its a terrible book; the author cherrypicks the data that suit his narrative. His core-arguments have been debunked and are untenable.
For starters, here are two papers you might want to read:
mattrognlie.com/piketty_diminishing_returns.pdf
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2543012
 
Maybe you should read the critical reviews of it. Its a terrible book; the author cherrypicks the data that suit his narrative. His core-arguments have been debunked and are untenable.
For starters, here are two papers you might want to read:
mattrognlie.com/piketty_diminishing_returns.pdf
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2543012
And this less technical one, with more of a historical bent:

http://www.deirdremccloskey.org/docs/pdf/PikettyReviewEssay.pdf
 
Rush Limbaugh was the first and and still one of the most popular far right talk radio hosts that dominate radio in America. He gained popularity among pretty much the exact crowd that would become the core Trump supporters in the 1990s. He was a firebrand, a blowhard and constantly reinforced the kind of dumbed anti-intellectualism that famous History Prof. Richard Hofstadter wrote about in an important 1966 book Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. He pioneered the way for all the future giants of conservative talk radio (see this list: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most-listened-to_radio_programs). While conservatives in America were constantly whining about "liberal media" they were taking over the radio stations.

The message that Rush started in the early 1990s and all the popular conservatives continue to push is a scaled down, simplified version of Austrian economics. A lot of the arguments they use are directly reliant on Ayn Rand, Friedrich Hayek or Ludwig von Mises' laissez-faire capitalism. Its the simply doctrine that the profit motive is always better for everything and Rush, Hannity and co. sell this view relentless. They pound their audience's ears with only the cherry picked stats that support their view and they completely ignore any nuanced research disproving their assumptions.

This is why I linked the Colin Camerer research earlier because it experimental debunks the notion that the profit motive always works as an incentive. This is the type of information that gets completely ignored by the conservative talk media that has a heavy influence. They keep reducing any economic discussion into this mind numbingly false choice of "laissez-faire or communism". And then they glorify the rich. There is always this framing undertone of all the rich deserve all their money and poor people deserve to be poor.

I drove a lot through America in the 1990s. You couldn't turn on the radio on the interstates in between cities without being bombarded with conservative talk radio. In some areas I remember hearing Rush Limbaugh on two different stations with the only alternatives bible talk radio and mariachi music. I always though it was a learning experience to browse through the conservative talk radio and hear what messages were influencing the huge swathes of rural lands, small towns and mini-cities. And when I would hear the radio then hear the types of discussions people would have in truck stops, bars and restaurants it was very revealing. People were not going to the library or taking university classes to learn about economics. They were listening to Rush and Hannity and simply regurgitating their same arguments.

Here is a bunch of articles if you want to spend time reading more

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/10/why-speak-up-when-rush-limbaugh-lies/246859/


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wo...rofile-The-Most-Dangerous-Man-in-America.html

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2009/05/rush-limbaugh200905

Actually those aren't the best articles let me try to dig up some more

Add (this is a good example of how conservative talk radio operates)



https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/01/how-rush-limbaugh-decides-what-is-true/283078/
Thanks onenil. Actually, I don't know what mariachi music is either. Maybe I should google.
 
Why do you care about this issue so much? Are we expected to believe that you just have complete compassion for poor people? That's the hardest thing to swallow in all of this. You could take all of these guys money away but the poor would still be poor.

Everyone should care about this issue a great deal.
 
I think you are sort-of on the right track here. The fundamental flaw is that government has been co-opted by corporate special interests. Government has been systemically stripped of its societal role by an intentional effort to instead manipulate government to further special interests

Not that I disagree with the statement but more on how it links with Capitalism. Do you think this doesn't exist in a communist China? In every form of Govt including monarchies from olden times, this has existed in some form or other.

Will touch on this again after below point ..

The fact of the matter is the system incentives heavily favor the already rich. Just look at the unfair difference in earned income tax rate and unearned income (mostly applies to multi-millionaires and the leisure class who live off investments that may but often do not actually benefit the economy overall). Mitt Romney and Donald Trump should not be paying less taxes than a struggling general practitioner, veteran teacher or firefighter. Period.

Again I agree with qualifications.

Take your corn examples, it benefits farmers in multiple states when California people pay 5 cents extra for fuel. This doesn't sound really bad to me as fundamentally all industries are linked. Fuel to steel to automobiles for examples. It's nearly impossible to get a law which benefits everyone and harms no one. If you want universal benefits somebody gotta pay more taxes.

In example above, Seattle decided having Amazon there was far more beneficial than the new tiny tax.

Always a compromise.

But in principle I agree Trump should not be able to pay less taxes than any normal person.
 
Here is a superb article on the new American Aristocracy I found looking for a better one on Limbaugh:

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/06/the-birth-of-a-new-american-aristocracy/559130/


The Atlantic Monthly said:
The meritocratic class has mastered the old trick of consolidating wealth and passing privilege along at the expense of other people’s children. We are not innocent bystanders to the growing concentration of wealth in our time. We are the principal accomplices in a process that is slowly strangling the economy, destabilizing American politics, and eroding democracy. Our delusions of merit now prevent us from recognizing the nature of the problem that our emergence as a class represents. We tend to think that the victims of our success are just the people excluded from the club. But history shows quite clearly that, in the kind of game we’re playing, everybody loses badly in the end...

Every piece of the pie picked up by the 0.1 percent, in relative terms, had to come from the people below. But not everyone in the 99.9 percent gave up a slice. Only those in the bottom 90 percent did. At their peak, in the mid-1980s, people in this group held 35 percent of the nation’s wealth. Three decades later that had fallen 12 points—exactly as much as the wealth of the 0.1 percent rose...

None of this matters, you will often hear, because in the United States everyone has an opportunity to make the leap: Mobility justifies inequality. As a matter of principle, this isn’t true. In the United States, it also turns out not to be true as a factual matter. Contrary to popular myth, economic mobility in the land of opportunity is not high, and it’s going down...

Imagine yourself on the socioeconomic ladder with one end of a rubber band around your ankle and the other around your parents’ rung. The strength of the rubber determines how hard it is for you to escape the rung on which you were born. If your parents are high on the ladder, the band will pull you up should you fall; if they are low, it will drag you down when you start to rise. Economists represent this concept with a number they call “intergenerational earnings elasticity,” or IGE, which measures how much of a child’s deviation from average income can be accounted for by the parents’ income. An IGE of zero means that there’s no relationship at all between parents’ income and that of their offspring. An IGE of one says that the destiny of a child is to end up right where she came into the world.

According to Miles Corak, an economics professor at the City University of New York, half a century ago IGE in America was less than 0.3. Today, it is about 0.5. In America, the game is half over once you’ve selected your parents. IGE is now higher here than in almost every other developed economy. On this measure of economic mobility, the United States is more like Chile or Argentina than Japan or Germany.

The story becomes even more disconcerting when you see just where on the ladder the tightest rubber bands are located. Canada, for example, has an IGE of about half that of the U.S. Yet from the middle rungs of the two countries’ income ladders, offspring move up or down through the nearby deciles at the same respectable pace. The difference is in what happens at the extremes. In the United States, it’s the children of the bottom decile and, above all, the top decile—the 9.9 percent—who settle down nearest to their starting point.

A few years ago, Alan Krueger, an economist and a former chairman of the Obama administration’s Council of Economic Advisers, was reviewing the international mobility data when he caught a glimpse of the fundamental process underlying our present moment. Rising immobility and rising inequality aren’t like two pieces of driftwood that happen to have shown up on the beach at the same time, he noted. They wash up together on every shore. Across countries, the higher the inequality, the higher the IGE (see Figure 2). It’s as if human societies have a natural tendency to separate, and then, once the classes are far enough apart, to crystallize.

999c60f6b.png


More to the article as well

And just to top off this point one of my favorite macroeconomists, James K Galbraith (remind of this article with the talk on Piketty)

Finally, there is the estate and gift tax—a jewel of the Progressive era. This Piketty rightly favors, but for the wrong reason. The main point of the estate tax is not to raise revenue, nor even to slow the creation of outsized fortunes per se; the tax does not interfere with creativity or creative destruction. The key point is to block the formation of dynasties. And the great virtue of this tax, as applied in the United States, is the culture of conspicuous philanthropy that it fosters, recycling big wealth to universities, hospitals, churches, theaters, libraries, museums, and small magazines.

These are the nonprofits that create about 8 percent of U.S. jobs, and whose services enhance the living standards of the whole population. Obviously the tax that fuels this philanthropy is today much eroded; dynasty is a huge political problem. But unlike the capital levy, the estate tax remains viable, in principle, because it requires that wealth be appraised only once, on the demise of the holder. Much more could be done if the law were tightened up, with a high threshold, a high rate, no loopholes, and less use of funds for nefarious politics, including efforts to destroy the estate tax.
 
Not that I disagree with the statement but more on how it links with Capitalism. Do you think this doesn't exist in a communist China? In every form of Govt including monarchies from olden times, this has existed in some form or other.

Will touch on this again after below point ..

Just because something has existed doesn't mean it should continue to exist or efforts should not be made to reduce its occurence. In 1850 you could have used this same logic to justify never attempting to get rid of slavery.

Again I agree with qualifications.

Take your corn examples, it benefits farmers in multiple states when California people pay 5 cents extra for fuel. This doesn't sound really bad to me as fundamentally all industries are linked. Fuel to steel to automobiles for examples.
It's nearly impossible to get a law which benefits everyone and harms no one. If you want universal benefits somebody gotta pay more taxes.

In example above, Seattle decided having Amazon there was far more beneficial than the new tiny tax.

Always a compromise.

But in principle I agree Trump should not be able to pay less taxes than any normal person.

Its really odd you would support this type of wealth redistribution but you have argued against other forms. This was a completely arbitrary law solely designed to redistribute money from the pockets of Californians to mid-west corn farmers with no overall benefits for society. That is the exact type of regressive, special interest welfare I do not support at all. Ethanol offered no environmental benefits over several alternatives so really that was just a mean spirited policy to steal money from Californians and give it to undeserving recipients. It offered no social utility in any way.
 
So its nasty for Silva to imply you are dumb (I didnt, I think you are reasonably intelligent but you don't care about people other than yourself) yet a few posts up you implied I was dumb "perhaps it was too sophisticated for you to grasp".

It was tongue in cheek because I felt the point I was making was pretty clear, and you chose to misrepresent what I said deliberately and act like I said something outrageous. My point wasn't that I don't understand how to feel compassion for poor people, it was that you are someone who rarely shows any compassion for anybody (on here at least, which is all I have to go on) so I find it a little hard to believe that your position on this is all based on compassion and helping the poor and not something else.
 
It was tongue in cheek because I felt the point I was making was pretty clear, and you chose to misrepresent what I said deliberately and act like I said something outrageous. My point wasn't that I don't understand how to feel compassion for poor people, it was that you are someone who rarely shows any compassion for anybody (on here at least, which is all I have to go on) so I find it a little hard to believe that your position on this is all based on compassion and helping the poor and not something else.
ICE thread, police brutality thread, gun control thread, healthcare thread and US politics threads, all on front page of the CE forum.
 
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Treating wealth as a zero sum game is just the sort of populist nonsense peddled by those who do not understand the subject.
Then explain it how 15 years ago, the top 350 richest people owned as much as 50% blottom, while now only top 50 richest people own as much as the bottom 50% of world population? Or how the rich have become significantly richer in the last decade but the wealth of majority of people has either stagnated or got reduced.
 
Just because something has existed doesn't mean it should continue to exist or efforts should not be made to reduce its occurence. In 1850 you could have used this same logic to justify never attempting to get rid of slavery.
Come on, slavery? Seriously?

Perfect equality is a mirage, an idealistic hope. Having rich parents is not Bezos fault or that he made his father's millions into billions. Some people achieve more in life than others through various reasons and I come inequality is part of the normal. I agree that this still needs to be controlled to stop it from spiraling out of control, but it'll always be there. Talent, luck, right place right time... too many variables to control it fully.
Its really odd you would support this type of wealth redistribution but you have argued against other forms.
I don't really support wealth redistribution but just mentioning the face that all laws have corollary consequences. It's just impossible for a closed stand alone act with no downstream effects. It's a juggling act at best and too downstream effects to minimum or at least contain it.
 
Come on, slavery? Seriously?

Perfect equality is a mirage, an idealistic hope. Having rich parents is not Bezos fault or that he made his father's millions into billions. Some people achieve more in life than others through various reasons and I come inequality is part of the normal. I agree that this still needs to be controlled to stop it from spiraling out of control, but it'll always be there. Talent, luck, right place right time... too many variables to control it fully.

I don't really support wealth redistribution but just mentioning the face that all laws have corollary consequences. It's just impossible for a closed stand alone act with no downstream effects. It's a juggling act at best and too downstream effects to minimum or at least contain it.

Even if full equality isn't possible, doesn't mean people shouldn't work to achieve it to the fullest degree. Slavery may seem extreme but at one point it would've been seen as normal and a key component of the economy. Those expecting full abolition would've been branded as idealists etc. Inequality to some degree is normal but shouldn't be just automatically accepted, especially when it spirals out of control.
 
Then explain it how 15 years ago, the top 350 richest people owned as much as 50% blottom, while now only top 50 richest people own as much as the bottom 50% of world population? Or how the rich have become significantly richer in the last decade but the wealth of majority of people has either stagnated or got reduced.
Those two facts are not related to each other. A person earning a million dollars doesn't mean someone else is losing a million dollars. It's not a zero sum game. You still have the likes of Oprah who went from nothing to having a $3bn fortune now under the same circumstances you describe.

New and exciting ideas get rewarded, joy just Amazon and Microsoft. Ideas like Uber or Snapchat became giants from nothing. With Cloud Computing getting popular opportunities for another company to rival Amazon or Microsoft is still plentiful.

Giants like Kodak went bust in blink of an eye and same may be the fate of Amazon down the future, who knows?
 
Come on, slavery? Seriously?

Perfect equality is a mirage, an idealistic hope. Having rich parents is not Bezos fault or that he made his father's millions into billions. Some people achieve more in life than others through various reasons and I come inequality is part of the normal. I agree that this still needs to be controlled to stop it from spiraling out of control, but it'll always be there. Talent, luck, right place right time... too many variables to control it fully.

You need to think about the logic you are using. Also lets make clear the equality I believe is worth striving for is equality of opportunity. Nowhere have I ever argued for some Harrison Bergeron reality so lets make that clear

I simply don't accept any variation of the argument "well we can't get it perfect so no point in trying" which is what it sounds like you are doing.

What we all should want as a society is one with balanced and fair upward and downward mobility. Obviously we will never reach IGE of perfect 0. But we can certainly strive to reverse the trend of crystallizing life outcomes of the top and bottom as the article shows and reducing the scary growing inequality by focusing on the empirical proven programs that work instead of just believing unscientific dogma.
I don't really support wealth redistribution but just mentioning the face that all laws have corollary consequences. It's just impossible for a closed stand alone act with no downstream effects. It's a juggling act at best and too downstream effects to minimum or at least contain it.

There is a lot more wealth redistribution of the scandalous type I just mentioned than what the conservative media constantly fills the audience's minds with. That's the problem.