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Quotes About Inequality

Los legisladores deberían centrarse siempre en cualquier mercado con rentas excesivas, pues son un indicador de que la economía podría funcionar más eficientemente: en realidad, la explotación inherente a estas termina debilitando la economía. Una batalla exitosa contra la búsqueda de renta redunda en redirigir los recursos hacia la creación de riqueza.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
Al agravar los efectos de la desigualdad de oportunidades educativas, junto con unos impuestos de sucesiones demasiado bajos, Estados Unidos está creando día a día una plutocracia hereditaria.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
today we live in an economy where a few firms can rake in massive amounts of profits for themselves and persist unchecked in their dominant position for years and years.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
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. (We'll give a fuller definition of the concept of rent seeking
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
To put it baldly, there are two ways to become wealthy: to create wealth or to take wealth away from others.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
The wealth given to the elites and to the bankers seemed to arise out of their ability and willingness to take advantage of others. One
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
This is an idea called trickle-down economics. It has a long pedigree—and has long been discredited. As we've seen, higher inequality has not led to more growth, and most Americans have actually seen their incomes sink or stagnate. What America has been experiencing in recent years is the opposite of trickle-down economics: the riches accruing to the top have come at the expense of those down below.21
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
especially in the United States, it seems that the political system is more akin to "one dollar one vote" than to "one person one vote.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
the markedly different patterns across countries demonstrate that policies matter. Inequality is a choice. It is not inevitable.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
We had been taught that, once a country reaches a certain stage of development, inequality shrinks—and America had exemplified that theory.9 In the years after World War II, every part of our society had prospered, but the incomes of those at the bottom grew faster than those at the top.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
markets on their own will fail to achieve shared and sustainable prosperity. Markets play an invaluable role in any well-functioning economy and yet they often fail to produce fair and efficient outcomes, producing too much of some things (pollution) and too little of others (basic research).
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
misshapen economy creates misshapen individuals and a misshapen society
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
we have a system that has been working overtime to move money from the bottom and middle to the top, but the system is so inefficient that the gains to the top are far less than the losses to the middle and bottom.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
Low growth, stagnating incomes, and growing inequality are, of course, deeply interrelated, and they all are, at least in part, the result of policies begun under President Reagan some four decades ago, policies based on deep and pervasive misunderstandings about what makes for a strong economy.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
The irony is that just as markets started delivering more unequal outcomes, tax policy asked less of the top. The top marginal tax rate was lowered from 70 percent under Carter to 28 percent under Reagan; it went up to 39.6 percent under Clinton and down finally to 35 percent under George W. Bush.54 This reduction was supposed to lead to more work and savings, but it didn't.55
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
When those who seem to be out competing oneself are foreigners, the inclination to say that they are engaging in unfair competition irresistible: to argue otherwise is to suggest that one simply doesn't measure up.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
Countries around the world provide frightening examples of what happens to societies when they reach the level of inequality toward which we are moving. It is not a pretty picture: countries where the rich live in gated communities, waited upon by hordes of low-income workers; unstable political systems where populists promise the masses a better life, only to disappoint.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
Some thirty years ago, the top 1 percent of income earners received only 12 percent of the nation's income.13
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
What America has been experiencing in recent years is the opposite of trickle-down economics: the riches accruing to the top have come at the expense of those down below.21
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
over the last three decades those with low wages (in the bottom 90 percent) have seen a growth of only around 15 percent in their wages, while those in the top 1 percent have seen an increase of almost 150 percent and the top 0.1 percent of more than 300 percent.27 Meanwhile
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
the six heirs to the Wal-Mart empire command wealth of $69.7 billion, which is equivalent to the wealth of the entire bottom 30 percent of U.S. society.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
Those at the top have managed to design a tax system in which they pay less than their fair share—they pay a lower fraction of their income than do those who are much poorer.
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
La globalización actual no funciona. Para muchos de los pobres de la Tierra no está funcionando. Para buena parte del medio ambiente no funciona. Para la estabilidad de la economía global no funciona
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz
We are now approaching the level of inequality that marks dysfunctional societies—it is a club that we would distinctly not want to join, including Iran, Jamaica, Uganda, and the Philippines.93
~ Joseph E. Stiglitz