http://evonomics.com/concentrated-power-drives-extreme-income-inequality/

Concentrated Power Drives Extreme Income Inequality and Slows Economic Growth

By Jordan Brennan

The emergence of economic inequality as a public policy issue grew out of the 
wreckage of the Great Recession. And while it was protest movements like Occupy 
Wall Street that brought visibility to America’s glaring income gap, academic 
economists have had a near monopoly on diagnosing why it is that inequality has 
worsened in the decades since 1980.

Monopolies rarely deliver outstanding service, and this is no exception. The 
economics profession is fond of believing that its theorizing is an impartial, 
value-neutral endeavor. In actuality, mainstream (‘neoclassical’) economics is 
loaded with suppositions that have as much to do with ideology as with science.

Take the distribution of income, which economists argue is (in the final 
analysis) a consequence of production. Whether one earns $10 per hour or $10 
million per year, the presumption is that individuals receive as income that 
which they contribute to societal output (their ‘marginal product’). In this 
vision, the free market is not only the best way to efficiently divide the 
economic pie, it also ensures distributive justice.

Get Evonomics in your inbox

But what if income inequality is shaped, in part, by broad power 
institutions—oligopolistic corporations and labor unions being two 
examples—such that some are able to claim a greater share of national income, 
not through superior productivity, but through market power?

In a study recently published with the Levy Economics Institute, I explore the 
power underpinnings of American income inequality over the past century. The 
key finding: corporate concentration exacerbates income inequality, while trade 
union power alleviates it.

Mass prosperity—the fabled ‘middle class’—was largely built between the 1940s 
and the 1970s. When President Roosevelt created the New Deal in 1935 union 
density was just eight percent. Density soared to nearly 30 percent by the 
mid-1950s, and the period spanning the 1930s to the 1970s would bear witness 
two major strike waves.

The combined effect was a surge in the national wage bill. In 1935 the share of 
national income going to the bottom 99 percent of the workforce was 44 percent. 
In tandem with strong unions and intense strike activity, the wage bill rose to 
54 percent by the 1970s. In the period after 1980, union density and work 
stoppages both plummeted, pulling the wage bill down with them. American 
unionization is now just 11 percent and the wage bill sits at 41 percent—a 
seven decade-low for both metrics.

The declining power of the labor movement has many causes, but a series of 
state policies in the early 1980s hastened the demise. President Regan’s 
penchant for union busting and the crippling effects of overly restrictive 
monetary policy (the infamous ‘Volcker shock’) broke the back or organized 
labor. As trade union power declined, a crucial mechanism for progressively 
redistributing income began to fade in significance.

The decline of trade unions did not lead to an economic golden age, as some 
would have hoped. In the decades after 1980, business investment trended 
downward, job creation slowed and GDP growth decelerated—a phenomenon often 
referred to as ‘secular stagnation’. Many economists have wondered why, given 
business-friendly policies in Washington, investment declined so precipitously 
after 1980.

My study reveals that America does not suffer from a shortage of investment in 
the general sense. The American corporate sector has been spending more money 
than ever, but instead of ploughing resources into job creation and fixed asset 
investment, historically unprecedented resources are flowing into mergers and 
acquisitions (M&A) and stock repurchase, the combined effect of which has been 
slower growth and rising inequality  (a finding which also applies to 
Canada—see here and here).

Unlike investment in fixed assets, which is linked with job creation, M&A 
merely redistributes corporate ownership claims between proprietors. The 
motivation for M&A is straightforward: large firms absorb the income stream of 
the firms they acquire while reducing competitive pressure, which increases 
their market power.

In the century spanning 1895 through 1990, for every dollar spent on fixed 
asset investment, American business spent an average of just 18 cents on M&A. 
In the period since 1990, for every dollar spent on fixed asset investment an 
average of 68 cents was spent on M&A—a four-fold increase.

The explosion of M&A since 1990 has led to the concentration of corporate 
assets (power, in other words). In 1990 the 100 largest American firms 
controlled 9 percent of total corporate assets. Asset concentration more than 
doubled over the next two decades, peaking at 21 percent. The creation of a 
concentrated market structure, which has gone largely unnoticed by the 
economics profession, is one reason inequality has worsened in recent decades.



With more market power-generated income at their disposal, large firms have 
paid comparatively more to shareholders in the form of dividends (the enclosed 
figure contrasts the income share of the richest 1 percent of Americans with 
the dividend share of national income).

At the same time, the 100 largest firms have spent more repurchasing their own 
stock than they have on machinery and equipment. And because many executives 
have stock options in their contracts, the share price inflation associated 
with stock repurchase has led to soaring executive compensation.

It is in this manner that increasing corporate concentration has simultaneously 
slowed growth and exacerbated inequality. None of these developments are 
inevitable, but if we are to meaningfully confront the dual problem of secular 
stagnation and soaring inequality we must begin to understand the role that 
power plays in driving these trends.

2016 April 11

BE INVOLVED

We welcome you to take part in the next evolution of economics. Sign up now to 
be kept in the loop!



Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to