I'm sympathetic to his argument, but the examples are weak. It really is hard 
work to turn an invention into a profitable business. 



Nobel Laureate Economist Says American Inequality Didn’t Just Happen. It Was 
Created. - Evonomics
http://evonomics.com/nobel-prize-economist-says-american-inequality-didnt-just-happen-it-was-created/
(via Instapaper)

By Joseph E. Stiglitz

American inequality didn’t just happen. It was created. Market forces played a 
role, but it was not market forces alone. In a sense, that should be obvious: 
economic laws are universal, but our growing inequality— especially the amounts 
seized by the upper 1 percent—is a distinctly American “achievement.” That 
outsize inequality is not predestined offers reason for hope, but in reality it 
is likely to get worse. The forces that have been at play in creating these 
outcomes are self-reinforcing.

America’s current level of inequality is unusual. Compared with other countries 
and compared with what it was in the past even in the United States, it’s 
unusually large, and it has been increasing unusually fast. It used to be said 
that watching for changes in inequality was like watching grass grow: it’s hard 
to see the changes in any short span of time. But that’s not true now.

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Addressing inequality is of necessity multifaceted—we have to rein in the 
excesses at the top, strengthen the middle, and help those at the bottom. Each 
goal requires a program of its own. But to construct such programs, we have to 
have a better understanding of what has given rise to each facet of this 
unusual inequality.

Distinct as the inequality we face today is, inequality itself is not something 
new. The concentration of economic and political power was in many ways more 
extreme in the precapitalist societies of the West. At that time, religion both 
explained and justified the inequality: those at the top of society were there 
because of divine right. To question that was to question the social order, or 
even to question God’s will.

However, for modern economists and political scientists, as also for the 
ancient Greeks, this inequality was not a matter of a preordained social order. 
Power—often military power— was at the origin of these inequities. Militarism 
was about economics: the conquerors had the right to extract as much as they 
could from the conquered. In antiquity, natural philosophy in general saw no 
wrong in treating other humans as means for the ends of others. As the ancient 
Greek historian Thucydides famously said, “right, as the world goes, is only in 
question between equals in power, while the strong do what they can and the 
weak suffer what they must.

Those with power used that power to strengthen their economic and political 
positions, or at the very least to maintain them. They also attempted to shape 
thinking, to make acceptable differences in income that would otherwise be 
odious.

As the notion of divine right became rejected in the early nation-states, those 
with power sought other bases for defending their positions. With the 
Renaissance and the Enlightenment, which emphasized the dignity of the 
individual, and with the Industrial Revolution, which led to the emergence of a 
vast urban underclass, it became imperative to find new justifications for 
inequality, especially as critics of the system, like Marx, talked about 
exploitation.

The theory that came to dominate, beginning in the second half of the 
nineteenth century—and still does—was called “marginal productivity theory”; 
those with higher productivities earned higher incomes that reflected their 
greater contribution to society. Competitive markets, working through the laws 
of supply and demand, determine the value of each individual’s contributions. 
If someone has a scarce and valuable skill, the market will reward him amply, 
because of his greater contribution to output. If he has no skills, his income 
will be low.

Technology and scarcity, working through the ordinary laws of supply and 
demand, play a role in shaping today’s inequality, but something else is at 
work, and that something else is government.

Inequality is the result of political forces as much as of economic ones. In a 
modern economy government sets and enforces the rules of the game—what is fair 
competition, and what actions are deemed anticompetitive and illegal, who gets 
what in the event of bankruptcy, when a debtor can’t pay all that he owes, what 
are fraudulent practices and forbidden. Government also gives away resources 
(both openly and less transparently) and, through taxes and social 
expenditures, modifies the distribution of income that emerges from the market, 
shaped as it is by technology and politics.

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Finally, government alters the dynamics of wealth by, for instance, taxing 
inheritances and providing free public education. Inequality is determined not 
just by how much the market pays a skilled worker relative to an unskilled 
worker, but also by the level of skills that an individual has acquired. In the 
absence of government support, many children of the poor would not be able to 
get basic health care and nutrition, let alone the education required to 
acquire the skills necessary for enhanced productivity and high wages. 
Government can affect the extent to which an individual’s education and 
inherited wealth depend on those of his parents.

The way the American government performs these functions determines the extent 
of inequality in our society. In each of these arenas there are subtle 
decisions that benefit some group at the expense of others. The effect of each 
decision may be small, but the cumulative effect of large numbers of decisions, 
made to benefit those at the top, can be very significant.

Competitive forces should limit outsize profits, but if governments do not 
ensure that markets are competitive, there can be large monopoly profits. 
Competitive forces should also limit disproportionate executive compensation, 
but in modern corporations, the CEO has enormous power—including the power to 
set his own compensation, subject, of course, to his board—but in many 
corporations, he even has considerable power to appoint the board, and with a 
stacked board, there is little check. Shareholders have minimal say. Some 
countries have better “corporate governance laws,” the laws that circumscribe 
the power of the CEO, for instance, by insisting that there be independent 
members in the board or that shareholders have a say in pay. If the country 
does not have good corporate governance laws that are effectively enforced, 
CEOs can pay themselves outsize bonuses.

Progressive tax and expenditure policies (which tax the rich more than the poor 
and provide systems of good social protection) can limit the extent of 
inequality. By contrast, programs that give away a country’s resources to the 
rich and well-connected can increase inequality.

Our political system has increasingly been working in ways that increase the 
inequality of outcomes and reduce equality of opportunity. This should not come 
as a surprise: we have a political system that gives inordinate power to those 
at the top, and they have used that power not only to limit the extent of 
redistribution but also to shape the rules of the game in their favor, and to 
extract from the public what can only be called large “gifts.” Economists have 
a name for these activities: they call them rent seeking, getting income not as 
a reward to creating wealth but by grabbing a larger share of the wealth that 
would otherwise have been produced without their effort. Those at the top have 
learned how to suck out money from the rest in ways that the rest are hardly 
aware of—that is their true innovation.

Indeed, some of the most important innovations in business in the last three 
decades have centered not on making the economy more efficient but on how 
better to ensure monopoly power or how better to circumvent government 
regulations intended to align social returns and private rewards.

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Rent Seeking

Rent seeking takes many forms: hidden and open transfers and subsidies from the 
government, laws that make the marketplace less competitive, lax enforcement of 
existing competition laws, and statutes that allow corporations to take 
advantage of others or to pass costs on to the rest of society. The term “rent” 
was originally used to describe the returns to land, since the owner of land 
receives these payments by virtue of his ownership and not because of anything 
he does. This stands in contrast to the situation of workers, for example, 
whose wages are compensation for the effort they provide. The term “rent” then 
was extended to include monopoly profits, or monopoly rents, the income that 
one receives simply from the control of a monopoly. Eventually the term was 
expanded still further to include the returns on similar ownership claims. If 
the government gave a company the exclusive right to import a limited amount (a 
quota) of a good, such as sugar, then the extra return generated as a result of 
the ownership of those rights was called a “quota-rent.”

Rent-seeking behavior is not just endemic in the resource rich countries of the 
Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. It has also become endemic in modern 
economies, including our own. In those economies, it takes many forms, some of 
which are closely akin to those in the oil-rich countries: getting state assets 
(such as oil or minerals) at below fair-market prices.

Another form of rent seeking is the flip side: selling to government products 
at above market prices (noncompetitive procurement). The drug companies and 
military contractors excel in this form of rent seeking. Open government 
subsidies (as in agriculture) or hidden subsidies (trade restrictions that 
reduce competition or subsidies hidden in the tax system) are other ways of 
getting rents from the public.

Not all rent seeking uses government to extract money from ordinary citizens. 
The private sector can excel on its own, extracting rents from the public, for 
instance, through monopolistic practices and exploiting those who are less 
informed and educated, exemplified by the banks’ predatory lending. CEOs can 
use their control of the corporation to garner for themselves a larger fraction 
of the firms’ revenues. Here, though, the government too plays a role, by not 
doing what it should: by not stopping these activities, by not making them 
illegal, or by not enforcing laws that exist. Effective enforcement of 
competition laws can circumscribe monopoly profits; effective laws on predatory 
lending and credit card abuses can limit the extent of bank exploitation; 
well-designed corporate governance laws can limit the extent to which corporate 
officials appropriate for themselves firm revenues.

By looking at those at the top of the wealth distribution, we can get a feel 
for the nature of this aspect of America’s inequality. Few are inventors who 
have reshaped technology, or scientists who have reshaped our understandings of 
the laws of nature. Think of Alan Turing, whose genius provided the mathematics 
underlying the modern computer. Or of Einstein. Or of the discoverers of the 
laser (in which Charles Townes played a central role) or John Bardeen, Walter 
Brattain, and William Shockley, the inventors of transistors. Or of Watson and 
Crick, who unraveled the mysteries of DNA, upon which rests so much of modern 
medicine. None of them, who made such large contributions to our well-being, 
are among those most rewarded by our economic system.

Instead, many of the individuals at the top of the wealth distribution are, in 
one way or another, geniuses at business. Some might claim, for instance, that 
Steve Jobs or the innovators of search engines or social media were, in their 
way, geniuses. Jobs was number 110 on the Forbes list of the world’s wealthiest 
billionaires before his death, and Mark Zuckerberg was 52. But many of these 
“geniuses” built their business empires on the shoulders of giants, such as Tim 
Berners- Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, who has never appeared on the 
Forbes list. Berners-Lee could have become a billionaire but chose not to—he 
made his idea available freely, which greatly speeded up the development of the 
Internet.

A closer look at the successes of those at the top of the wealth distribution 
shows that more than a small part of their genius resides in devising better 
ways of exploiting market power and other market imperfections—and, in many 
cases, finding better ways of ensuring that politics works for them rather than 
for society more generally.

Excerpted from The Price of Inequality: How Today’s Divided Society Endangers 
Our Future by Joseph E. Stiglitz. Copyright © 2013, 2012 by Joseph E. Stiglitz. 
With permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights 
reserved.



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