>From today's Globe and Mail.

Ed


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October 3, 2010
Gap between rich and poor won't be closing any time soon
By BARRIE McKENNA
Globe and Mail Update
Even the rich agree wealth should be more equally shared but most people balk 
at policies that would do that
It is what economist Paul Krugman calls "the Great Divergence" - the growing 
gap between rich and poor in America.

Countless studies assure us it's real. The rich, as measured by income or net 
worth, have been steadily and impressively growing more affluent since the 
1970s. By some measures, the moneyed class may be richer than it has ever been.

The wealthiest 1 per cent of Americans, for example, now pocket nearly 
one-quarter of the country's income. They also control as much half of total 
wealth, including property, bank accounts, investments, art and the like. And 
their share of the pie has roughly doubled in the past four decades.

Income is more evenly shared in Canada. But not by much, and the trend toward 
greater concentration at the top is identical. Between the mid-1990s and the 
mid-2000s, income inequality grew faster in Canada than in all but one of 17 
leading developed countries, according to the Conference Board of Canada's 2010 
performance report.

And yet we don't like to acknowledge inequality, in spite of its obvious link 
to poverty, crime and other social problems. Many people may be oblivious to 
the fact that it even exists.

Nor are people inclined to redistribute wealth, Robin Hood-style. Voters 
generally aren't fond of politicians who would tax millions of us more to 
engineer a more egalitarian society.

The inequality debate prompted Harvard University marketing professor Michael 
Norton and Duke University behavioural economist Dan Ariely to explore 
Americans' perceptions of income utopia. And the two have come up with some 
surprising and provocative answers in a new study: Building a Better America, 
One Wealth Quintile at a Time.

Their conclusion: Americans don't have a clue about how unfairly wealth is 
shared in their country. And their utopian model is Sweden - one of the 
developed countries that looks the least like their own.

The academics drew their data from 5,522 respondents, matching the demographic 
makeup of the country.

Participants were asked to look at three pie charts with wealth distributed 
between chunks of 20 per cent of the population. One chart showed wealth 
distributed equally between the five pieces of the pie; another showed the U.S. 
reality; and a third matched Sweden, where roughly 32 per cent of the country's 
wealth is in the hands of the richest 20 per cent.

A startling 92 per cent of American respondents, including more than nine out 
of 10 Republicans who voted for former president George W. Bush, picked the 
Swedish model as the ideal. Even the rich agreed that wealth should be more 
evenly shared.

"Americans seem to prefer to live in a country more like Sweden than the United 
States," the authors said.

Respondents also failed to recognize their own reality. They estimated that the 
richest 20 per cent of Americans probably control 59 per cent of the wealth. 
The actual figure they control is 84 per cent.

The authors argued that "Americans prefer some inequality to perfect equality, 
but not to the degree currently present in the United States."

That said, professors Norton and Ariely acknowledged there is a disconnect 
between what people say they want for their society and the kinds of policies 
they would actually embrace. "Americans may remain unlikely to advocate for 
policies that would narrow this gap," they concluded.

Consider the current U.S. political landscape. Americans appear poised to toss 
out dozens of Democrats in the November midterm elections. The result could be 
significantly less equality as Republican gains make it more likely that 
Congress will renew a batch of expiring Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy, 
slash government spending and perhaps even roll back the recent expansion of 
health care.

Canadians also appear to be drifting to the right - and toward fiscal austerity 
- as the country digs itself out of the recession. Liberal governments in 
British Columbia and Ontario are facing challenges from the right. New 
Brunswick went Conservative last week.

In Ottawa, the Harper government is shifting its priorities, too, dialing back 
on fiscal stimulus and turning its attention to deficit reduction as it 
prepares its next budget.

The concentration of wealth grew worse during the boom years. Narrowing the 
wealth gap is likely to prove even more challenging as the economy enters an 
era of slow growth, flat wages and unusually grumpy voters.


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