A new perspective on this from two physicists & their computer model

http://www.newstatesman.com/200209020014
NS Essay - The science of inequality
Mark Buchanan,Published 02 September 2002

You always knew that the rich got richer through no merit of their 
own, didn't you? Now, with the aid of computers, scientists think 
they have proved it

Why is wealth so unevenly distributed among individuals? This is 
perhaps the most controversial and inflammatory of all topics in 
economics. As J K Galbraith noted, the attempt to explain and 
rationalise inequality "has commanded some of the greatest, or in any 
case some of the most ingenious, talent in the economics profession".

We all know that a few people are very rich and that most of us have 
far less. But inequality in the distribution of wealth has a 
surprisingly universal character. You might expect the distribution 
to vary widely from country to country, depending not only on 
politics and culture but also, for example, on whether a nation 
relies on agriculture or heavy industry. Towards the end of the 19th 
century, however, an Italian engineer-turned-economist named Vilfredo 
Pareto discovered a pattern in the distribution of wealth that 
appears to be every bit as universal as the laws of thermodynamics or 
chemistry.

Suppose that, in Britain, China, the United States or any other 
country, you count the number of people worth, say, $10,000. Suppose 
you then count the number worth $20,000, $30,000 and so on, and 
finally plot the results on a graph. You would find, as Pareto did, 
many individuals at the poorer end of the scale and progressively 
fewer at the wealthy end. This is hardly surprising. But Pareto 
discovered that the numbers dwindle in a very special way: towards 
the wealthy end, each time you double the amount of wealth, the 
number of people falls by a constant factor.

Big deal? It is. Mathematically, a "Pareto distribution" implies that 
a small fraction of the wealthiest people always possess a lion's 
share of a country's riches. It is quite easy to imagine a country 
where the bulk of people in the middle of the distribution would own 
most of the wealth. But that is never so. In the United States, 
something approaching 80 per cent of the wealth is held by 20 per 
cent of the people, and the numbers are similar in Chile, Bolivia, 
Japan, South Africa and the nations of western Europe. It may be 10 
per cent owning 90 per cent, 5 per cent owning 85 per cent, or 3 per 
cent owning 96 per cent, but in all cases, wealth seems to migrate 
naturally into the hands of the few. Indeed, although good data are 
sadly lacking, studies in the mid-1970s, based on interviews with 
Soviet emigrants, suggested that wealth inequality in the Soviet 
Union was then comparable to that in the UK.

What causes this striking regularity across nations? The question is 
all the more urgent now that inequality seems to be growing. In the 
US, according to the economist Paul Krugman: "The standard of living 
of the poorest 10 per cent of American families is significantly 
lower today than it was a generation ago. Families in the middle are, 
at best, slightly better off. Only the wealthiest 20 per cent of 
Americans have achieved income growth anything like the rates nearly 
everyone experienced between the 1940s and early 1970s. Meanwhile the 
income of families high in the distribution has risen dramatically, 
with something like a doubling of real incomes of the top 1 per cent."

Something similar is taking place on the global stage. Globalisation 
is frequently touted - especially by those with vested economic 
interests, such as multinational corporations and investment banks - 
as a process that will inevitably help the poor of the world. To be 
sure, greater technological and economic global integration ought to 
have the potential to do so. Yet as Joseph Stiglitz, the former chief 
economist of the World Bank, notes in his recent book Globalization 
and Its Discontents: "Despite repeated promises of poverty reduction 
made over the last decade of the 20th century, the actual number of 
people living in poverty has actually increased by almost 100 
million. This occurred at the same time that total world income 
actually increased by an average of 2.5 per cent annually."

What is the origin of these distinct but seemingly related trends: 
the greater inequality within nations (which applies to the UK, and 
many other countries, especially in eastern Europe, as well as to the 
US) and the greater inequality between them? We can blame tax cuts, 
the liberalisation of capital markets, new communication 
technologies, the policies of the International Monetary Fund and so 
on. But might there be a general science that could illuminate the 
basic forces that lead to wealth inequity?


Conventional economic theory has never before managed to explain the 
origin of Pareto's universal pattern. But two physicists, Jean-
Philippe Bouchaud and Marc Mezard of the University of Paris, 
venturing across the lines between academic disciplines, have 
recently done so.

Forget for the moment about ingenuity, intelligence, entrepreneurial 
skills and other factors that might influence an individual's 
economic destiny. Instead, take a step into the abstract, think of an 
economy as a network of interacting people, and focus on how wealth 
flows about in this network.

It will flow - causing individuals' wealth to go up or down - in one 
of two fundamental ways. The first is through the bread-and-butter 
transactions of our daily economic lives: your employer pays you for 
your work; you buy groceries; you build a fence to keep in the dog; 
you take a holiday in Tuscany. The second is through rises and falls 
in asset values: houses and shares, for example. The physicists have 
shown how the interplay of these two basic forces largely determines 
how wealth is distributed.

Bouchaud and Mezard formulated a set of equations that could follow 
wealth as it shifts from person to person, and as each person makes 
random gains or losses from his or her investments. They also 
included one further feature to reflect how the value of wealth is 
relative. A poor single parent might face near-ruin over the loss of 
a £20 note; in contrast, a very rich person wouldn't flinch after 
losing a few thousand. In other words, the value of a little more or 
less wealth depends on how much one already has. This implies that 
when it comes to investing, wealthy people will tend to invest 
proportionally more than the less wealthy.

The equations that capture these basic economic processes are quite 
simple. However, there is a catch. For a network of many people - 
say, a thousand or more - the number of equations is similarly large. 
A model of this sort, therefore, lies well beyond anyone's 
mathematical abilities to construct (and this explains why it has not 
appeared in conventional economics). But the philosopher Daniel 
Dennett has for good reason called the digital computer "the most 
important epistemological advance in scientific method since the 
invention of accurate timekeeping devices". The work of Bouchaud and 
Mezard falls into a rapidly growing area known as "computational 
economics", which uses the computer to discover principles of 
economics that one might otherwise never identify.

Bouchaud and Mezard explored their model in an exhaustive series of 
simulations. And in every run, they found the same result - after 
wealth flows around the network for some time, it falls into a steady 
pattern in which the basic shape of wealth distribution follows the 
form discovered by Pareto. Indeed, this happens even when every 
person starts with exactly the same amount of money and exactly the 
same money-making skills.

Why? Transactions between people should spread wealth around. If one 
person becomes terrifically wealthy, he or she may start businesses, 
build houses and consume more products; in each case, wealth will 
tend to flow out to others in the network. Likewise, if one person 
becomes terrifically poor, less wealth will flow through links going 
away from him, as he will tend to purchase fewer products. Overall, 
the flow of funds along links in the network should wash away wealth 
disparities.

But it seems that this washing-out effect never manages to gain hold, 
because the random returns on investment drive a 
counterbalancing "rich-get-richer" phenomenon. Even if everyone 
starts out equally, and they remain equally adept at choosing 
investments, differences in investment luck will cause some people to 
accumulate more wealth than others. Those who are lucky will tend to 
invest more, and so have a chance to make greater gains still. Hence, 
a string of positive returns builds a person's wealth not merely by 
addition but by multiplication, as each subsequent gain grows ever 
bigger. This is enough, even in a world of equals where returns on 
investment are entirely random, to stir up huge disparities of wealth 
in the population.

This finding suggests that the basic inequality in wealth 
distribution seen in most societies - and globally as well, among 
nations - may have little to do with differences in the backgrounds 
and talents of individuals or countries. Rather, the disparity 
appears as a law of economic life that emerges naturally as an 
organisational feature of a network.


Does this mean that it is impossible to mitigate inequities in 
wealth? Pareto found (as many other researchers found later) that the 
basic mathematical form of wealth distribution is always the same. 
You find that, each time you double the amount of wealth, the number 
of people having that much falls by a constant factor. This is the 
pattern that always leads to a small fraction of the wealthy 
possessing a large fraction of everything.

Nevertheless, the "constant factor" can vary: there is a huge 
difference between the richest 5 per cent owning 40 per cent of the 
wealth, and their owning 95 per cent. An additional strength of the 
Bouchaud-Mezard network model is that it shows how this degree of 
inequity can be altered.

The physicists found two general rules. First, the greater the volume 
of wealth flowing through the economy - the greater the "vigour" of 
trading, if you will - then the greater the equality. Conversely, the 
more volatile the investment returns, the greater the inequity. This 
has some curious practical implications, some obvious and some not so 
obvious.

Take taxes, for instance. The model confirms the assumption that 
income taxes will tend to erode differences in wealth, as long as 
those taxes are redistributed across the society in a more or less 
equal way. After all, taxation represents the artificial addition of 
extra transactional links into the network, along which wealth can 
flow from the rich towards the poor. Similarly, a rise in capital 
gains taxes will tend to ameliorate disparities in wealth, both by 
discouraging speculation and by decreasing the returns from it. On 
the other hand, the model suggests that sales taxes, even those 
targeted at luxury goods, might well exaggerate differences in wealth 
by leading to fewer sales (thus reducing the number of transactional 
links) and encouraging people to invest more of their money.

The model also offers an excellent test of some arguments that 
politicians commonly use. For example, the pro-free-market policies 
of Britain and the US in the 1980s and 1990s were defended on the 
grounds that wealth would "trickle down" to the poor. Everything was 
done to encourage investment activity, regardless of the risks 
involved. As we know, the wealth did not trickle down and wealth in 
both countries is now significantly less equally distributed than it 
was three decades ago. Under the network model, this is just what one 
would expect - a dramatic increase in investment activity, unmatched 
by measures to boost the flow of funds between people (such as higher 
taxes), ought to kick up an increase in wealth inequality.


What about globalisation? Our model suggests that, as international 
trade grows, it should create a better balance between richer and 
poorer nations: western corporations setting up manufacturing plants 
in developing nations and exporting their computing and accounting to 
places such as India and the Philippines should help wealth flow in 
to these countries. But, as Stiglitz notes, western countries have 
pushed poor nations to eliminate trade barriers, while keeping up 
their own barriers, thus ensuring that they garner a disproportionate 
share of the benefits. As the Bouchaud-Mezard model illustrates, free 
trade could be a good thing for everyone, but only if it enables 
wealth to flow in both directions without bias.

If we go back to the model, it reveals another, rather alarming 
prospect. Bouchaud and Mezard found that if the volatility of 
investment returns becomes sufficiently great, the differences in 
wealth it churns up can completely overwhelm the natural diffusion of 
wealth generated by transactions. In such a case, an economy - 
whether within one nation, or across the globe - can undergo a 
transition wherein its wealth, instead of being held by a small 
minority, condenses into the pockets of a mere handful of super-
rich "robber barons".

Some countries, particularly developing nations, may already be in 
this state. It has been estimated, for example, that the richest 40 
people in Mexico own nearly 30 per cent of the wealth. It could also 
be that many societies went through this phase in the past.

In Russia, following the collapse of the USSR, wealth has become 
spectacularly concentrated; inequality there is dramatically higher 
than in any country in the west. The model would suggest that both 
the increased volatility of investment and lack of opportunities for 
wealth redistribution might be at work. In the social vacuum created 
by the end of the Soviet era, economic activity is less restricted 
than in the west, as there are few regulations to protect the 
environment or to provide safety for workers. This not only leads to 
pollution and human exploitation, but also generates extraordinary 
profits for a few companies (the politically well-connected, 
especially; a popular pun in Russia equates privatisation with 
the "grabbing of state assets"). Economists have also pointed out 
that Russia has been slow to implement income taxes that would help 
to redistribute wealth.

The Bouchaud-Mezard model is not the last word in explaining the 
distribution of wealth, or how best to manage it. But it does offer 
basic lessons. Although wealth inequity may indeed be inevitable, its 
degree can be adjusted. With regulation to protect the environment 
and workers' rights, free trade and globalisation should be forces 
for good, offering better economic opportunities for all. But we will 
achieve such ends only if global integration is carried out sensibly, 
carefully and, most important of all, honestly.

Mark Buchanan's Small World: uncovering nature's hidden networks is 
published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson (£18.99)


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