Quote:
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
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The professor would have done well to better acquaint himself with the issue before writing that.
He makes a number of statements that, while true, are relatively inconsequential. Then he fails to even mention the most important factor of all, while assigning blame to events that manifestly have nothing at all to do with rising inequality.
For instance, there's this excerpt:
"That began to change with Ronald Reagan as the tax system put a greater relative burden on the poor and middle class..."
Amazing.
The guy obviously suffers either from ideological bias or complete ignorance of the history of tax bracket structures (or both). Successive rounds of tax-cutting over the last 30 years have lessened the tax burden on the middle class, not increased it. In fact, about 47% of households have been completely relieved of the income tax burden.
Then he completely fails to even mention the rise of free-trade globalism and the extensive de-industrialization of the U.S. economy. Discussing the issue of increasing income inequality without addressing those factors is about like ignoring a 500-pound gorilla sitting in the middle of your living room.