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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Is Income Inequality Good or Bad?



the AZEL

PERSPECTIVE

Commentary on Cuba's Future, U.S. Foreign Policy & Individual Freedoms - Issue 58
 


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Recent reports on the global distribution of wealth show a trend of increasing inequality. According to a report by the Boston Consulting Group, the number of millionaire households grew by 6% globally in 2015, with their proportion of global wealth reaching 47%. China and India experienced large increases in the number of millionaire households, but Liechtenstein and Switzerland maintain the highest concentrations. Millionaire households represent 1% of world population but share close to one half of global private wealth.
In the United States, income inequality has been growing for some 35 years and almost everyone believes that income inequality is always undesirable.  But, is it really?  What matters is not inequality as such, but how that inequality came about.
 
First, let’s dispense with the inequality that results from government granted privileges, unfair practices, dishonesty, corruption, cronyism, theft, or any wealth that is the product of illicit gains. This inequality is most definitely bad and should be prosecuted vigorously.  What I am discussing here is only the inequality that results from the creation of goods and services. This inequality, derives naturally from someone’s creation of value, and is not a zero-sum game that results from one group taking from another.
 
Increased inequality is a natural phenomenon that flows from our diversity in talents, capacities, preferences, choices and more. When our activities create something of value and our wealth increases, we are better off, but so is society.   Decriers of inequality incorrectly posit that the economic pie is fixed so that a bigger slice for some must come at the expense of others.
 
The evidence suggests that, in market economies, increased inequality and stronger economic growth work in tandem enlarging the economic pie. Patterns across developed nations show that higher inequality is accompanied by a richer middle class and richer poor population. Higher inequality is related to higher living standards for those below the high income levels as well as for those in the top levels.
 
The enormous financial success of businesses like, Microsoft, Apple, Goggle, Facebook and many others have made their founders and investors enormously rich. Their wealth has certainly increased income inequality by increasing the ranks of the super rich. But we are also better off as a byproduct of their success, and our lives and opportunities have been enhanced by the products and services that they created.    
 
Angus Deaton, who was awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in Economic Science and is known for his studies of inequality, urges us to hold a non-moralizing vision of inequality: “Inequality is very complex, and it is simplistic to think it is good or bad. It is nonsensical to condemn inequality. It is equivalent to saying that progress is bad. Progress has always been unequal.”
 
Professor Deaton emphasizes that inequality results when an individual or group progresses. As such inequality is a metric of success, and also an incentive to be successful. He argues we should focus not on inequality, but on injustice.  The real measure of improvements in society is not vilifying the rich; it is increasing the wellbeing of the poor. Natural inequality does not lower the standard of living of the poor. The increase in global inequality is driven mostly by the creation of new wealth such as rising household income.
 
Milton Friedman, also a recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economic Science (1976), argued that economic policy should focus on freedom as a primary value and not on income inequality. In his view, some degree of inequality is desirable in a well functioning economic system and is unavoidable if we are to respect freedom.  In Free to Choose(with his wife Rose Friedman) he explained:
 
A society that puts equality -in the sense of equality of outcome- ahead of freedom will end up with neither equality nor freedom…On the other hand, a society that puts freedom first will, as a happy by-product, end up with both greater freedom and greater equality.
 
Freedom is an ethical value in its own right. Accepting freedom requires us to accept the results that arise from our voluntary transactions.

Please let us know if you Like Issue 58 - Is Income Inequality Good or Bad? on Facebook this article.
This article was originally published in English in the PanAm Post and in Spanish in El Nuevo Herald.
 
José Azel, Ph.D.
José Azel left Cuba in 1961 as a 13 year-old political exile in what has been dubbed Operation Pedro Pan - the largest unaccompanied child refugee movement in the history of the Western Hemisphere.  

He is currently dedicated to the in-depth analyses of Cuba's economic, social and political state, with a keen interest in post-Castro-Cuba strategies as a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS) at the University of Miami and has published extensively on Cuba related topics.

In 2012 and 2015, Dr. Azel testified in the U.S. Congress on U.S.-Cuba Policy, and U.S. National Security.  He is a frequent speaker and commentator on these and related topics on local, national and international media.  He holds undergraduate and masters degrees in business administration and a Ph.D. in International Affairs from the University of Miami. 

Dr. Azel is author of Mañana in Cuba: The Legacy of Castroism and Transitional Challenges for Cuba, published in March 2010 and of Pedazos y Vacios, a collection of poems he wrote as a young exile in the 1960's.

José along with his wife Lily are avid skiers and adventure travelers.  In recent years they have climbed Grand Teton in Wyoming, trekked Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and Machu Pichu in Peru.  They have also hiked in Tibet and in the Himalayas to Mt. Everest Base Camp.

They cycled St. James Way (
El Camino de Santiago de Compostela) and cycled alongside the Danube from Germany to Hungary. They have scuba dived in the Bay Islands off the Honduran coast. 

Their adventurers are normally dedicated to raise funds for causes that are dear to them. 
Watch Joe & Lily summit Kilimanjaro.

Books by Dr. José Azel
Mañana in Cuba is a comprehensive analysis of contemporary Cuba with an incisive perspective of the Cuban frame of mind and its relevancy for Cuba's future.
Buy now

 
Pedazos y Vacíos is a collection of poems written in by Dr. Azel in his youth. Poems are in Spanish.
Buy now
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