What the ‘Inequality’ Warriors Really Want
Progressives decry inequality as the world’s most pressing economic
problem. In its name, they urge much greater income and wealth taxation,
especially of the reviled top 1% of earners, along with more government
spending and controls—higher minimum wages, “living” wages, comparable
worth directives, CEO pay caps, etc.
Inequality may be a symptom of economic problems. But why is inequality
itself an economic problem? If some get rich and others get richer, who
cares? If we all become poor equally, is that not a problem? Why not fix
policies and problems that make it harder to earn more?
Yes, the reported taxable income and wealth earned by the top 1% may
have grown faster than for the rest. This could be good
inequality—entrepreneurs start companies, develop new products and
services, and get rich from a tiny fraction of the social benefit. Or it
could be bad inequality—crony capitalists who get rich by exploiting
favors from government. Most U.S. billionaires are entrepreneurs from
modest backgrounds, operating in competitive new industries, suggesting
the former.
But there are many other kinds and sources of inequality. The returns to
skill have increased. People who can use or program computers, do math
or run organizations have enjoyed relative wage increases. But why don’t
others observe these returns, get skills and compete away the skill
premium? A big reason: awful public schools dominated by teachers
unions, which leave kids unprepared even to enter college. Limits on
high-skill immigration also raise the skill premium.
Americans stuck in a cycle of terrible early-child experiences,
substance abuse, broken families, unemployment and criminality represent
a different source of inequality. Their problems have proven immune to
floods of government money. And government programs and drug laws are
arguably part of the problem.
These problems, and many like them, have nothing to do with a rise in top 1% incomes and wealth.
Recognizing, I think, this logic, inequality warriors go on to argue
that inequality is a problem because it causes other social or economic
ills. A recent Standard & Poor’s report sums up some of these
assertions: “As income inequality increased before the [2008 financial]
crisis, less affluent households took on more and more debt to keep
up—or, in this case, catch up—with the Joneses. ” In a 2011 Vanity Fair
article, Columbia University economist Joe Stiglitz wrote that
inequality causes a “lifestyle effect . . . people outside the top 1
percent increasingly live beyond their means.’’ He called it
“trickle-down behaviorism.”
I see. A fry cook in Fresno hears that more hedge-fund managers are
flying in private jets. So he buys a pickup he can’t afford. They are
saying that we must tax away wealth to encourage thrift in the lower
classes.
Here’s another claim: Inequality is a problem because rich people save
too much. So, by transferring money from rich to poor, we can increase
overall consumption and escape “secular stagnation.”
I see. Now we need to forcibly transfer wealth to solve our deep problem of national thriftiness.
You can see in these examples that the arguments are made up to justify a
pre-existing answer. If these were really the problems to be solved,
each has much more natural solutions.
[...]
There is a lot of fashionable talk about “redistribution” that’s not
really the agenda. Even sky-high income and wealth taxes would not raise
much revenue for very long, and any revenue is likely to fund
government programs, not checks to the needy. Most inequality warriors,
including President Obama, forthrightly advocate taxation to level
incomes in the name of “fairness,” even if those taxes raise little or
no revenue.
When you get past this kind of balderdash, most inequality warriors get
down to the real problem they see: money and politics. They think money
is corrupting politics, and they want to take away the money to purify
the politics. As Berkeley economist Emmanuel Saez wrote for his 2013
Arrow lecture at Stanford University: “top income shares matter” because
the “surge in top incomes gives top earners more ability to influence
[the] political process.”
A critique of rent-seeking and political cronyism is well taken, and
echoes from the left to libertarians. But if abuse of government power
is the problem, increasing government power is a most unlikely solution.
If we increase the top federal income-tax rate to 90%, will that not
just dramatically increase the demand for lawyers, lobbyists, loopholes,
connections, favors and special deals? Inequality warriors think not.
Mr. Stiglitz, for example, writes that “wealth is a main determinant of
power.” If the state grabs the wealth, even if fairly earned, then the
state can benevolently exercise its power on behalf of the common
person.
No. Cronyism results when power determines wealth. Government power
inevitably invites the trade of regulatory favors for political support.
We limit rent-seeking by limiting the government’s ability to hand out
goodies.
So when all is said and done, the inequality warriors want the
government to confiscate wealth and control incomes so that wealthy
individuals cannot influence politics in directions they don’t like.
Koch brothers, no. Public-employee unions, yes. This goal, at least,
makes perfect logical sense. And it is truly scary.
Prosperity should be our goal. And the secrets of prosperity are simple
and old-fashioned: property rights, rule of law, economic and political
freedom. A limited government providing competent institutions.
Confiscatory taxation and extensive government control of incomes are
not on the list.
Mr. Cochrane is a professor of finance at the University of Chicago
Booth School of Business, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and
an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute.
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