, NY Times -In
the four decades between 1969 and 2008, economists played a leading
role in slashing taxation of the wealthy and in curbing public
investment. They supervised the deregulation of major sectors, including
transportation and communications. They lionized big business,
defending the concentration of corporate power, even as they demonized
trade unions and opposed worker protections like minimum wage laws.
Economists even persuaded policymakers to assign a dollar value to human
life — around $10 million in 2019 — to assess whether regulations were
worthwhile.
The revolution, like so many revolutions, went too far. Growth slowed and inequality soared, with devastating consequences.
Perhaps the starkest measure of the failure of our economic policies is
that the average American’s life expectancy is in decline, as
inequalities of wealth have become inequalities of health. Life
expectancy rose for the wealthiest 20 percent of Americans between 1980
and 2010. Over the same three decades, life expectancy declined for the
poorest 20 percent of Americans. Shockingly, the difference in average
life expectancy between poor and wealthy women widened from 3.9 years to
13.6 years.
Rising inequality also is
straining the health of liberal democracy. The idea of “we the people”
is fading because, in this era of yawning inequality, there is less we
share in common. As a result, it is harder to build support for the
kinds of policies necessary to deliver broad-based prosperity in the
long term, like public investment in education and infrastructure.
1 comment:
LINK:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/24/opinion/sunday/economics-milton-friedman.html?
Post a Comment