If you google the title and then follow the google link to the article 
you get the full text. I've no idea why this works, but I'm able to do 
it regularly with the WSJ.


The attention that's been showered on Thomas Piketty's best-selling 
tome, "Capital in the 21st Century," has been something to behold. 
Pikettymania has raised public awareness of inequality in the U.S. as no 
one has managed to do since the 1960s. Predictably, Mr. Piketty, a 
professor at the Paris School of Economics, is being lionized by the 
left and vilified by the right.

His central claims are that inequality is both too high already and 
destined to rise further. (Think France in the Belle Epoque.) Both 
claims are debatable, of course. The first is a value judgment on which 
the left and the right will never agree. The second is a forecast, for 
which Mr. Piketty makes good arguments. But it's a forecast nonetheless.

In thinking about his two claims, notice, first, that the abstract 
notion of inequality being "too high" can mean either that the rich are 
too rich or that the poor are too poor (or both). Mr. Piketty emphasizes 
the former. Second, you can focus on income inequality, where we have 
far more data, or on wealth inequality, where we have less. Mr. 
Piketty's signal scholarly achievement is to make a quantum leap in our 
supply of data on wealth, which is his focus.

That's all wonderful. But if there is to be a national debate on what to 
do about inequality in the United States, I'd like to see the focus put 
elsewhere: namely, worrying more about the bottom than the top, and 
focusing on income inequality rather than on wealth inequality. The two 
are related, of course: The portion of wealth inequality that is not 
derived from inheritance is largely a consequence of huge income 
disparities.

Enlarge Image

French economist and academic Thomas Piketty Reuters
Related, but different. As Mr. Piketty poignantly observes, even in rich 
countries the lower 50% of the population owns little wealth other than 
their homes (if they own them) and their pension rights (if they have 
any). So focusing on wealth disparities, or even on the income derived 
from wealth (interest, dividends, capital gains) can't tell you much 
about what's happening in the middle of the income distribution, not to 
mention at the bottom. For people in the middle, earnings are virtually 
the whole story. Down closer to the bottom, it's about earnings and 
government transfer payments.

Several problems have afflicted America's workers since the late 1970s.

First, the share of labor income in total income has fallen. Using net 
(of taxes and depreciation) domestic income as the measure, and treating 
the income of self-proprietors as coming half from labor and half from 
capital, Commerce Department data show that labor's share dropped to 
about 73% in 2012 from about 77% in 1979. Capital's share rose 
correspondingly.

Second, and closely related, wages have stagnated relative to 
productivity. In theory, real hourly compensation (in dollars of 
constant purchasing power, including fringe benefits) should track labor 
productivity (real output per hour). And from 1947 to 1980, it pretty 
much did. But Labor Department data for the nonfarm business sector show 
that real compensation has grown at only half the rate of productivity 
improvement since 1980—1% per annum versus 2%. Over a period of 33 
years, that opened up a yawning 40% gap.

Third, and perhaps most important, the distribution of wages has spread 
out drastically. According to compilations by the Economic Policy 
Institute, the median real wage—that is, the real wage earned exactly in 
the middle of the wage distribution—rose by a mere 5% over the years 
1979-2012. The implied annual rate of increase is close enough to zero 
that you can taste it. By contrast, the wage at the 95th percentile rose 
a healthy 39% over those same 33 years. And the rewards for work grew 
vastly faster in the top 1%—that's the top 1% in wage earnings, not in 
total incomes—where the increase was 154% over this period. Let's 
remember that the top 1% now comprises roughly 1.35 million workers. So 
we are not only talking about CEOs, movie stars and hedge-fund operators 
here—though their earnings have shot off the charts.

At the bottom, things have been truly dismal. At the 20th percentile of 
the wage distribution, real wages were essentially flat over the 33 
years; at the 10th percentile, they fell 6%. And this is for people who 
have jobs. Most of the poor do not.

In 1979, 11.7% of Americans lived below the official poverty line. By 
2012, that percentage rose to 15%, even though real GDP was 72% higher. 
Only about a third of these unfortunate people worked in 2012, and fewer 
than 10% worked full time, year-round. As a result, much more of their 
income comes from government transfer payments than from earnings. 
Meanwhile, the safety net that provides this support has been under 
ferocious political attack for decades.

The bottom lines are three. First, a significantly smaller share of the 
nation's income now goes to labor than was true 30-35 years ago. Second, 
labor's shrinking share has grown drastically more unequal. Third, the 
U.S. does less to support its poor than, say, Western European nations 
do. These are facts. Their policy implications have been and remain 
controversial.

Concentrating on, say, the growing gap between the upper 1% and the 
lower 99% leads Mr. Piketty to advocate such redistributive policies as 
higher top income-tax rates, stiffer inheritance taxes and a progressive 
tax on wealth.

But if you dote instead on plight of the lower 15%-20%, or even on the 
lack of progress of the lower 50%, you are led to think about policies 
like giving poor children preschool education, bolstering Medicaid, 
raising the minimum wage, expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit, and 
defending anti-poverty programs like food stamps.

These two policy agendas are not inconsistent, but they are certainly 
very different. The first tries to level from the top; the second tries 
to level from the bottom. Between the two, I'd like to think that most 
Americans join me in favoring the second. But I'm worried. Does 
Pikettymania prove me wrong?

Mr. Blinder, a professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton 
University and former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, is the 
author of "After the Music Stopped: The Financial Crisis, the Response, 
and the Work Ahead" (Penguin, 2013).

On 8/29/2014 6:11 AM, Jurriaan Bendien wrote:
> Does anybody have access to the WSJ? I am trying to obtain a download of
> Alan Blinder's “‘Pikettymania’ and Inequality in the U.S.” article in
> The Wall Street Journal,
> June 23 , 2014, A13. The URL is:
> http://online.wsj.com/articles/alan-blinder-pikettymania-and-inequality-in-the-u-s-1403477052
> Unfortunately I forgot to download it, when I first saw it. If you can
> help, mail me at jurriaanbendien-f/vm7P8qpiNmR6Xm/[email protected]
> <mailto:jurriaanbendien-f/vm7P8qpiNmR6Xm/[email protected]> Thank
> you for your assistance.
> Jurriaan
>
>
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> pen-l mailing list
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