[maybe more readable]

Defending the One Percent

N. Gregory Mankiw  June 7, 2013

Forthcoming, Journal of Economic Perspectives

N. Gregory Mankiw is the Robert M. Beren Professor of Economics,
Harvard University,  Cambridge, Massachusetts. His e-mail address is
[email protected].  I am grateful to David Autor, Nathaniel Hilger,
Chang-Tai Hseih, Steven Kaplan, Ulrike  Malmendier, Deborah Mankiw,
Nicholas Mankiw, Lisa Mogilanski, Alexander Sareyan,  Lawrence
Summers, Timothy Taylor, Jane Tufts, and Matthew Weinzierl for helpful
comments  and discussion.

Imagine a society with perfect economic equality. Perhaps out of sheer
coincidence, the  supply and demand for different types of labor
happen to produce an equilibrium in which  everyone earns exactly the
same income. As a result, no one worries about the gap between the
rich and poor, and no one debates to what extent public policy should
make income  redistribution a priority. Because people earn the value
of their marginal product, everyone is  fully incentivized to provide
the efficient amount of effort. The government is still needed to
provide public goods, such as national defense, but those are financed
with a lump-sum tax.  There is no need for taxes that would distort
incentives, such as an income tax, because they  would be strictly
worse for everyone. The society enjoys not only perfect equality but
also  perfect efficiency.

Then, one day, this egalitarian utopia is disturbed by an entrepreneur
with an idea for a  new product. Think of the entrepreneur as Steve
Jobs as he develops the iPod, J.K. Rowling as  she writes her Harry
Potter books, or Steven Spielberg as he directs his blockbuster
movies.  When the entrepreneur’s product is introduced, everyone in
society wants to buy it. They each  part with, say, $100. The
transaction is a voluntary exchange, so it must make both the buyer
and the seller better off. But because there are many buyers and only
one seller, the distribution  of economic well-being is now vastly
unequal. The new product makes the entrepreneur much  richer than
everyone else.

The society now faces a new set of questions: How should the
entrepreneurial  disturbance in this formerly egalitarian outcome
alter public policy? Should public policy remain  the same, because
the situation was initially acceptable and the entrepreneur improved
it for  everyone? Or should government policymakers deplore the
resulting inequality and use their  powers to tax and transfer to
spread the gains more equally?

In my view, this thought experiment captures, in an extreme and
stylized way, what has  happened to US society over the past several
decades. Since the 1970s, average incomes have  grown, but the growth
has not been uniform across the income distribution. The incomes at
the  top, especially in the top 1 percent, have grown much faster than
average. These high earners  have made significant economic
contributions, but they have also reaped large gains. The  question
for public policy is what, if anything, to do about it.

This development is one of the largest challenges facing the body
politic. A few numbers  illustrate the magnitude of the issue. The
best data we have on the upper tail of the income  distribution come
from Piketty and Saez’s (2003, with updates) tabulations of individual
tax  returns. (Even these numbers, though, are subject to some
controversy: the tax code changes  over time, altering the incentives
to receive and report compensation in alternative forms.)  According
to their numbers, the share of income, excluding capital gains, earned
by the top 1  percent rose from 7.7 percent in 1973 to 17.4 percent in
2010. Even more striking is the share  earned by the top 0.01
percent—an elite group that, in 2010, had a membership requirement of
annual income exceeding $5.9 million. This group’s share of total
income rose from 0.5 percent  in 1973 to 3.3 percent in 2010. These
numbers are not easily ignored. Indeed, they in no small  part
motivated the Occupy movement, and they have led to calls from
policymakers on the left to  make the tax code more progressive.

At the outset, it is worth noting that addressing the issue of rising
inequality necessarily  involves not just economics but also a healthy
dose of political philosophy. We economists  must recognize not only
the limits of what we know about inequality’s causes, but also the
limits  on the ability of our discipline to prescribe policy
responses. Economists who discuss policy  responses to increasing
inequality are often playing the role of amateur political philosopher
(and,  admittedly, I will do so in this essay). Given the topic, that
is perhaps inevitable. But it is  useful to keep when we are writing
as economists and when we are venturing beyond the  boundaries of our
professional expertise.

Is Inequality Inefficient?

It is tempting for economists who abhor inequality to suggest that the
issue involves not  just inequality per se, but also economic
inefficiency. Discussion of inequality necessarily  involves our
social and political values, but if inequality also entails
inefficiency, those  normative judgments are more easily agreed upon.
The Pareto criterion is the clearest case: If  we can make some people
better off without making anyone worse off, who could possibly
object? Yet for the question at hand, this criterion does not take us
very far. As far as I know,  no one has proposed any credible policy
intervention to deal with rising inequality that will make  everyone,
including those at the very top, better off.

More common is the claim that inequality is inefficient in the sense
of shrinking the size  of the economic pie. (That is, inefficiency is
being viewed through the lens of the Kaldor-Hicks  criterion.) If the
top 1 percent is earning an extra $1 in some way that reduces the
incomes of the  middle class and the poor by $2, then many people will
see that as a social problem worth  addressing. For example, suppose
the rising income share of the top 1 percent were largely
attributable to successful rent-seeking. Imagine that the government
were to favor its political  allies by granting them monopoly power
over certain products, favorable regulations, or  restrictions on
trade. Such a policy would likely lead to both inequality and
inefficiency.  Economists of all stripes would deplore it. I certainly
would.

Joseph Stiglitz’s (2012) book, The Price of Inequality, spends many
pages trying to  convince the reader that such rent-seeking is a
primary driving force behind the growing incomes  of the rich. This
essay is not the place for a book review, but I can report that I was
not  convinced. Stiglitz’s narrative relies more on exhortation and
anecdote than on systematic  evidence. There is no good reason to
believe that rent-seeking by the rich is more pervasive  today than it
was in the 1970s, when the income share of the top 1 percent was much
lower than  it is today.

I am more persuaded by the thesis advanced by Claudia Goldin and
Lawrence Katz (2008)  in their book The Race between Education and
Technology. Goldin and Katz argue that skill- biased technological
change continually increases the demand for skilled labor. By itself,
this  force tends to increase the earnings gap between skilled and
unskilled workers, thereby  increasing inequality. Society can offset
the effect of this demand shift by increasing the supply  of skilled
labor at an even faster pace, as it did in the 1950s and 1960s. In
this case, the earnings  gap need not rise and, indeed, can even
decline, as in fact occurred. But when the pace of  educational
advance slows down, as it did in the 1970s, the increasing demand for
skilled labor  will naturally cause inequality to rise. The story of
rising inequality, therefore, is not primarily  about politics and
rent-seeking but rather about supply and demand.

To be sure, Goldin and Katz focus their work on the broad changes in
inequality, not on  the incomes of the top 1 percent in particular.
But it is natural to suspect that similar forces are  at work. The
income share of the top 1 percent exhibits a U-shaped pattern: falling
from the  1950s to the 1970s, and rising from the 1970s to the
present. The earnings differentials between  skilled and unskilled
workers studied by Goldin and Katz follow a similar U-shaped pattern.
If  Goldin and Katz are right that the broad changes in inequality
have driven by the interaction  between technology and education,
rather than changes in rent-seeking through the political  process,
then it would seem an unlikely coincidence that the parallel changes
at the top have  been driven by something entirely different. Rather,
it seems that changes in technology have  allowed a small number of
highly educated and exceptionally talented individuals to command
superstar incomes in ways that were not possible a generation ago.
Erik Brynjolfsson and  Andrew McAfee (2011) advance this thesis
forcefully in their book Race Against the Machine.  They write (p.
44), “Aided by digital technologies, entrepreneurs, CEOs,
entertainment stars, and  financial executives have been able to
leverage their talents across global markets and capture  reward that
would have been unimaginable in earlier times.”

Nonetheless, to the extent that Stiglitz is right that inefficient
rent-seeking is a driving  force behind rising inequality, the
appropriate policy response is to address the root cause. It is  at
best incomplete and at worst misleading to describe the situation as
simply “rising inequality,”  because inequality here is a symptom of a
deeper problem. A progressive system of taxes and  transfers might
make the outcome more equal, but it would not address the underlying
inefficiency. For example, if domestic firms are enriching themselves
at the expense of  consumers through quotas on imports (as is the case
with some agribusinesses), the solution to  the problem entails not a
revision of the tax code but rather a change in trade policy. I am
skeptical that such rent-seeking activities are the reason why
inequality has risen in recent  decades, but I would support attempts
to reduce whatever rent-seeking does occur.

 An especially important and particularly difficult case is the
finance industry, where  many hefty compensation packages can be
found. On the one hand, there is no doubt that this  sector plays a
crucial role. Those who work in commercial banks, investment banks,
hedge funds  and other financial firms are in charge of allocating
capital and risk, as well as providing  liquidity. They decide, in a
decentralized and competitive way, which firms and industries need  to
shrink and which will be encouraged to grow. It makes sense that a
nation would allocate  many of its most talented and thus highly
compensated individuals to this activity. On the other  hand, some of
what occurs in financial firms does smack of rent seeking: when a
high-frequency  trader figures out a way to respond to news a fraction
of a second faster than his competitor, his  vast personal reward may
well exceed the social value of what he is producing. Devising a legal
 and regulatory framework to ensure that we get the right kind and
amount of financial activity is  a difficult task. While the solution
may well affect the degree of equality and the incomes of the  1
percent, the issue is primarily one of efficiency. A well-functioning
economy needs the correct  allocation of talent. The last thing we
need is for the next Steve Jobs to forgo Silicon Valley in  order to
join the high-frequency traders on Wall Street. That is, we shouldn’t
be concerned about  the next Steve Jobs striking it rich, but we want
to make sure he strikes it rich in a socially  productive way.

Equality of Opportunity as a Desideratum

Closely related to the claim of inefficiency is concern about
inequality of opportunity.  Equality of opportunity is often viewed as
a social goal in itself, but economists recognize that  the failure to
achieve such equality would normally lead to inefficiency as well. If
some  individuals are precluded from pursuing certain paths in life,
then they might be unable to  contribute fully to growing the economic
pie. To be specific, if children from poor families are  unable to
continue their education because of financial constraints, they do not
accumulate the  optimal amount of human capital. The outcome from
underinvestment in education is both  unequal and inefficient.

Measuring the degree of equality of opportunity is difficult. In his
book, Stiglitz (2012)  proposes a metric: the intergenerational
transmission of income. He says (p. 18), “If America  were really a
land of opportunity, the life chances of success—of, say, winding up
in the top 10  percent—of someone born to a poor or less educated
family would be the same as those of  someone born to a rich,
well-educated, and well-connected family.” In other words, under this
definition of equality of opportunity, people’s earnings would be
uncorrelated with those of their  parents. Needless to say, in the
data, that is not at all the case, which leads Stiglitz to conclude
that we are falling short of providing equal opportunity.

Yet the issue cannot be settled so easily, because the
intergenerational transmission of  income has many causes beyond
unequal opportunity. In particular, parents and children share  genes,
a fact that would lead to intergenerational persistence in income even
in a world of equal  opportunities. IQ, for example, has been widely
studied, and it has a large degree of heritability.  Smart parents are
more likely to have smart children, and their greater intelligence
will be  reflected, on average, in higher incomes. Of course, IQ is
only one dimension of talent, but it is  easy to believe that other
dimensions, such as self-control, ability to focus, and interpersonal
skills, have a degree of genetic heritability as well.

This is not to say that we live in a world of genetic determinism, for
surely we do not.  But it would be a mistake to go to the other
extreme and presume no genetic transmission of  economic outcomes. A
recent survey of the small but growing field of genoeconomics by
Benjamin et al. (2012) reports, “Twin studies suggest that economic
outcomes and preferences,  once corrected for measurement error,
appear to be about as heritable as many medical  conditions and
personality traits.” Similarly, in his study of the life outcomes of
adopted  children, Sacerdote (2007) writes, “While educational
attainment and income are frequently the  focus of economic studies,
these are among the outcomes least affected by differences in family
environment.” (He reports that family background exerts a stronger
influence on social variables,  such as drinking behavior.) This
evidence suggests that it is implausible to interpret generational
persistence in income as simply a failure of society to provide equal
opportunities. Indeed,  Sacerdote estimates (in his Table 5) that
while 33 percent of the variance of family income is  explained by
genetic heritability, only 11 percent is explained by the family
environment. The  remaining 56 percent includes environmental factors
unrelated to family. If this 11 percent  figure is approximately
correct, it suggests that we are not far from a plausible definition
of  equality of opportunity—that is, being raised by the right family
does give a person a leg up in  life, but family environment accounts
for only a small percentage of the variation in economic  outcomes
compared with genetic inheritance and environmental factors unrelated
to family.

To the extent that our society deviates from the ideal of equality of
opportunity, it is  probably best to focus our attention on the left
tail of the income distribution rather than on the  right tail.
Poverty entails a variety of socioeconomic maladies, and it is easy to
believe that  children raised in such circumstances do not receive the
right investments in human capital. By  contrast, the educational and
career opportunities available to children of the top 1 percent are, I
 believe, not very different from those available to the middle class.
My view here is shaped by  personal experience. I was raised in a
middle-class family; neither of my parents were college  graduates. My
own children are being raised by parents with both more money and more
 education. Yet I do not see my children as having significantly
better opportunities than I had at  their age.

In the end, I am led to conclude that concern about income inequality,
and especially  growth in incomes of the top 1 percent, cannot be
founded primarily on concern about  inefficiency and inequality of
opportunity. If the growing incomes of the rich are to be a focus of
public policy, it must be because income inequality is a problem in
and of itself.

The Big Tradeoff

In the title of his celebrated 1975 book, Arthur Okun told us that the
“big tradeoff” that  society faces is between equality and efficiency.
We can use the government’s system and taxes  and transfers to move
income from the rich to the poor, but that system is a “leaky bucket.”
 Some of the money is lost as it is moved. This leak should not stop
us from trying to redistribute,  Okun argued, because we value
equality. But because we are also concerned about efficiency,  the
leak will stop us before we fully equalize economic resources.

The formal framework that modern economists use to address this issue
is that proposed  by Mirrlees (1971). In the standard Mirrlees model,
individuals get utility from consumption C  and disutility from
providing work effort L. They differ only according to their
productivity W.  In the absence of government redistribution, each
person’s consumption would be WL. Those  with higher productivity
would have higher consumption, higher utility, and lower marginal
utility.

The government is then introduced as a benevolent social planner with
the goal of  maximizing total utility in society (or, sometimes, a
more general social welfare function that  could depend nonlinearly on
individual utilities). The social planner wants to move economic
resources from those with high productivity and low marginal utility
to those with lower  productivity and higher marginal utility. Yet
this redistribution is hard to accomplish, because  the government is
assumed to be unable to observe productivity W; instead, it observes
only  income WL, the product of productivity and effort. If it
redistributes income too much, high  productivity individuals will
start to act as if they are low productivity individuals. Public
policymakers are thus forced to forgo the first-best egalitarian
outcome for a second-best  incentive-compatible solution. Like a
government armed with Okun’s leaky bucket, the  Mirrleesian social
planner redistributes to some degree but also allows some inequality
to remain.

If this framework is adopted, then the debate over redistribution
turns to questions about  key parameters. In particular, optimal
redistribution depends on the degree to which work effort  responds to
incentives. If the supply of effort is completely inelastic, then the
bucket has no leak,  and the social planner can reach the egalitarian
outcome. If the elasticity is small, the social  planner can come
close. But if work effort responds substantially to incentives, then
the bucket  is more like a sieve, and the social planner should
attempt little or no redistribution. Thus, much  debate among
economists about optimal redistribution centers on the elasticity of
labor supply.

 Even if one is willing to accept the utilitarian premise of this
framework, there is good  reason to be suspect of particular numerical
results that follow from it. When researchers  implement the Mirrlees
model, they typically assume, as Mirrlees did, that all individuals
have  the same preferences. People are assumed to differ only in their
productivity. For purposes of  illustrative theory, that assumption is
fine, but it is also false. Incomes differ in part because  people
have different tastes regarding consumption, leisure, and job
attributes. Acknowledging  variation in preferences weakens the case
for redistribution (Lockwood and Weinzierl 2012).  For example, many
economics professors could have pursued higher-income career paths as
business economists, software engineers, or corporate lawyers. That
they chose to take some of  their compensation in the form of personal
and intellectual freedom rather than cold cash is a  personal
lifestyle choice, not a reflection of innate productivity. Those who
made the opposite  choice may have done so because they get greater
utility from income. A utilitarian social  planner will want to
allocate greater income to these individuals, even apart from any
incentive  effects.

Another problem with the Mirrlees framework as typically implemented
is that it takes a  simplistic approach to tax incidence. Any good
introductory student of economics knows that  when a good or service
is taxed, the buyer and seller share the burden. Yet in the Mirrlees
framework, when an individual’s labor income is taxed, only the seller
of the services is worse  off. In essence, the demand for labor
services is assumed to be infinitely elastic. A more general  set of
assumptions would acknowledge that the burden of the tax is spread
more broadly to  buyers of those services (and perhaps to sellers of
complementary inputs as well). In this more  realistic setting, tax
policy would be a less well-targeted tool for redistributing economic
wellbeing.


 The harder and perhaps deeper question is whether the government’s
policy toward  redistribution is best viewed as being based on a
benevolent social planner with utilitarian  preferences. That is, did
Okun and Mirrlees provide economists with the right starting point for
 thinking about this issue? I believe there are good reasons to doubt
this model from the get-go.

The Uneasy Case for Utilitarianism

For economists, the utilitarian approach to income distribution comes
naturally. After all,  utilitarians and economists share an
intellectual tradition: early utilitarians, such as John Stuart  Mill,
were also among the early economists. Also, utilitarianism seems to
extend the  economist’s model of individual decision-making to the
societal level. Indeed, once one adopts  the political philosophy of
utilitarianism, running a society becomes yet another problem of
constrained optimization. Despite its natural appeal (to economists,
at least), the utilitarian  approach is fraught with problems.

One classic problem is the interpersonal comparability of utility. We
can infer an  individual’s utility function from the choices that
individual makes when facing varying prices  and levels of income. But
from this revealed-preference perspective, utility is not inherently
measurable, and it is impossible to compare utilities across people.
Perhaps advances in  neuroscience will someday lead to an objective
measure of happiness, but as of now, there is no  scientific way to
establish whether the marginal dollar consumed by one person produces
more  or less utility than the marginal dollar consumed by a neighbor.


 Another more concrete problem is the geographic scope of the
analysis. Usually,  analyses of optimal income redistribution are
conducted at the national level. But there is  nothing inherent in
utilitarianism that suggests such a limitation. Some of the largest
income  disparities are observed between nations. If a national system
of taxes and transfers is designed  to move resources from Palm Beach,
Florida, to Detroit, Michigan, shouldn’t a similar  international
system move resources from the United States and Western Europe to
sub-Saharan  Africa? Many economists do support increased foreign aid,
but as far as I know, no one has  proposed marginal tax rates on rich
nations as high as the marginal tax rates imposed on rich
individuals. Our reluctance to apply utilitarianism at the global
level should give us pause when  applying it at the national level.

In a 2010 paper, Matthew Weinzierl and I emphasized another reason to
be wary of  utilitarianism: it recommends a greater use of “tags” than
most people feel comfortable with. As  Akerlof (1978) pointed out, if
the social planner can observe individual characteristics that are
correlated with productivity, then an optimal tax system should use
that information, in addition  to income, in determining an
individual’s tax liability. The more the tax system is based on such
fixed characteristics rather than income, the less it will distort
incentives. Weinzierl and I showed  that one such tag is height.
Indeed, the correlation between height and wages is sufficiently
strong that the optimal tax on height is quite large. Similarly,
according to the utilitarian calculus,  the tax system should also
make a person’s tax liability a function of race, gender, and perhaps
many other exogenous characteristics. Of course, few people would
embrace the idea of a height  tax, and Weinzierl and I did not offer
it as a serious policy proposal. Even fewer people would  be
comfortable with a race-based income tax (although Alesina et al.,
2011, propose in earnest a  gender-based tax). Yet these implications
cannot just be ignored. If you take from a theory only  the
conclusions you like and discard the rest, you are using the theory as
a drunkard uses a lamp  post—for support rather than illumination. If
utilitarianism takes policy in directions that most  people don’t
like, then perhaps it is not a sound foundation for thinking about
redistribution and  public policy.

Finally, in thinking about whether the utilitarian model really
captures our moral  intuitions, it is worth thinking for a moment
about the first-best outcome for a utilitarian social  planner.
Suppose, in contrast to the Mirrlees model, the social planner could
directly observe  productivity. In this case, the planner would not
need to worry about incentives, but could set  taxes and transfers
based directly on productivity. The optimal policy would equalize the
marginal utility of consumption across individuals; if the utility
function is assumed to be  additively separable in consumption and
leisure, this means everyone consumes the same amount.  But because
some people are more productive than others, equalizing leisure would
not be  optimal. Instead, the social planner would require more
productive individuals to work more.  Thus, in the utilitarian
first-best allocation, the more productive members of society would
work  more and consume the same as everyone else. In other words, in
the allocation that maximizes  society’s total utility, the less
productive individuals would enjoy a higher utility than the more
productive.

Is this really the outcome we would want society to achieve if it
could? A true utilitarian  would follow the logic of the model and say
“yes.” Yet this outcome does not strike me as the  ideal toward which
we should aspire, and I suspect most people would agree. Even young
children have an innate sense that merit should be rewarded
(Kanngiesser and Warneken  2012)—and I doubt it is only because they
are worried about the incentive effects of not doing so.


 If I am right, then we need a model of optimal government taxes and
transfers that departs  significantly from conventional utilitarian
social planning.

Listening to the Left

In recent years, the left side of the political spectrum has focused
much attention on the  rising incomes of the top 1 percent. This
includes President Obama’s proposals to raises taxes on  higher
incomes, the Occupy Wall Street movement, and a rash of books about
economic  inequality. Even though I don’t share the left’s policy
conclusions, I find it is worthwhile to  listen carefully to their
arguments to discern what set of philosophical principles and
empirical  claims underlie their concerns.

It is, I believe, hard to square the rhetoric of the left with the
economist’s standard  framework. Someone favoring greater
redistribution along the lines of Okun and Mirrlees would  argue as
follows. “The rich earn higher incomes because they contribute more to
society than  others do. However, because of diminishing marginal
utility, they don’t get much value from  their last few dollars of
consumption. So we should take some of their income away and give it
to less productive members of society. While this policy would cause
the most productive  members to work less, shrinking the size of the
economic pie, that is a cost we should bear, to  some degree, to
increase utility for society’s less productive citizens.”


Surely, that phrasing of the argument would not animate the Occupy
crowd! So let’s  consider the case that the left makes in favor of
greater income redistribution. There are three  broad classes of
arguments.

The first is the suggestion that the tax system we now have is
regressive. Most famously,  during the presidential campaign of 2008,
at a fund-raiser for Hillary Clinton, the billionaire  investor Warren
E. Buffett said that the rich were not paying enough. Mr. Buffett used
himself as  an example. He asserted that his taxes in the previous
year equaled only 17.7 percent of his  taxable income, while his
receptionist paid about 30 percent of her income in taxes (Tse 2007).
In 2011, President Obama proposed the “Buffett rule,” which would
require taxpayers with  income over a million dollars to pay at least
30 percent of their income in federal income taxes.

There are, however, good reasons to be skeptical of Buffett’s
calculations. If his  receptionist was truly a middle-income taxpayer,
then to get her tax rate to 30 percent, he most  likely added the
payroll tax to the income tax. Fair enough. But for Buffett’s tax rate
to be only 17.7 percent, most of his income was likely dividends and
capital gains, and his calculation had  to ignore the fact that this
capital income was already taxed at the corporate level. A complete
accounting requires aggregating not only all taxes on labor income but
also all taxes on capital  income.  The Congressional Budget Office
(2012) does precisely that when it calculates the  distribution of the
federal tax burden—and it paints a very different picture than did
Buffett’s  anecdote. In 2009, the most recent year available, the
poorest fifth of the population, with  average annual income of
$23,500, paid only 1.0 percent of its income in federal taxes. The
middle fifth, with income of $64,300, paid 11.1 percent. And the top
fifth, with income of  $223,500, paid 23.2 percent. The richest 1
percent, with an average income of $1,219,700, paid 28.9 percent of
its income to the federal government. To be sure, some taxpayers
aggressively  plan to minimize taxes, and this may result in some
individual cases where those with high  incomes pay relatively little
in federal taxes. But the CBO data make clear that these cases are
the exceptions. As a general rule, the existing federal tax code is
highly progressive.

A second type of argument from the left is that the incomes of the
rich do not reflect their  contributions to society. In the standard
competitive labor market, a person’s earnings equal the  value of his
or her marginal productivity. But there are various reasons that real
life might  deviate from this classical benchmark. If, for example, a
person’s high income results from  political rent-seeking rather than
producing a valuable product, the outcome is likely to be both
inefficient and widely viewed as inequitable. Steve Jobs getting rich
from producing the iPod  and Pixar movies does not produce much ire
among the public. A Wall Street executive  benefiting from a
taxpayer-financed bailout does.

The key issue is the extent to which the high incomes of the top 1
percent reflect high  productivity rather than some market
imperfection. This question is one of positive economics,  but
unfortunately not one that is easily answered. My own reading of the
evidence is that most of  the very wealthy get that way by making
substantial economic contributions, not by gaming the  system or
taking advantage of some market failure or the political process. Take
the example of  pay for chief executive officers. Without doubt, CEOs
are paid handsomely, and their pay has  grown over time relative to
that of the average worker. Commentators on this phenomenon  sometimes
suggest that this high pay reflects the failure of corporate boards of
directors to do  their job. Rather than representing shareholders, the
argument goes, boards are too cozy with the  CEOs and pay them more
than they are worth to their organizations. Yet this argument fails to
 explain the behavior of closely-held corporations. A private equity
group with a controlling  interest in a firm does not face the alleged
principal-agent problem between shareholders and  boards, and yet
these closely-held firms also pay their CEOs handsomely. Indeed,
Kaplan (2012)  reports that over the past three decades, executive pay
in closely-held firms has outpaced that in  public companies. Conqvist
and Fahlenbrach (2012) find that when public companies go private,
the CEOs tend to get paid more rather than less in both base salaries
and bonuses. In light of  these facts, the most natural explanation of
high CEO pay is that the value of a good CEO is  extraordinarily high
(a conclusion that, incidentally, is consistent with the model of CEO
pay  proposed by Gabaix and Landier, 2008).

A third argument that the left uses to advocate greater taxation of
those with higher  incomes is that the rich benefit from the physical,
legal, and social infrastructure that government  provides and,
therefore, should contribute to supporting it. As one prominent
example, President  Obama (2012) said in a speech, “If you were
successful, somebody along the line gave you some  help. There was a
great teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this
unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive.
Somebody invested in  roads and bridges. If you’ve got a business --
you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that  happen. The Internet
didn’t get invented on its own. Government research created the
Internet so  that all the companies could make money off the Internet.
The point is that when we succeed,  we succeed because of our
individual initiative, but also because we do things together.”

In the language of traditional public finance, President Obama was
relying less on the  ability-to-pay principle and more on the benefits
principle. That is, higher taxation of the rich is  not being
justified by the argument that their marginal utility of consumption
is low, as it is in  the frameworks of Okun and Mirrlees. Rather,
higher taxation is being justified by the claim that  the rich
achieved their wealth in large measure because of the goods and
services the government  provides and therefore have a responsibility
to finance those goods and services.

This line of argument raises the empirical question of how large the
benefit of  government infrastructure is. The average value is surely
very high, as lawless anarchy would  leave the rich (as well as most
everyone else) much worse off. But like other inputs into the
production process, government infrastructure should be valued at the
margin, where the  valuation harder to discern. As I pointed out
earlier, the average person in the top 1 percent pays  more than a
quarter of income in federal taxes, and about a third if state and
local taxes are  included. Why isn’t that enough to compensate for the
value of government infrastructure?

A relevant fact here is that, over time, an increasing share of
government spending has  been for transfer payments, rather than for
purchases of goods and services. Government has  grown as a percentage
of the economy not because it is providing more and better roads, more
 and better legal institutions, and more and better educational
systems. Rather, government has  increasingly used its power to tax to
take from Peter to pay Paul. Discussions of the benefits of
government services should not distract from this fundamental truth.

In the end, the left’s arguments for increased redistribution are
valid in principle but  dubious in practice. If the current tax system
were regressive, or if the incomes of the top 1  percent were much
greater than their economic contributions, or if the rich enjoyed
government  services in excess of what they pay in taxes, then the
case for increasing the top tax rate would  indeed be strong. But
there is no compelling reason to believe that any of these premises
holds  true.

 The Need for an Alternative Philosophical Framework

A common thought experiment used to motivate income redistribution is
to imagine a  situation in which individuals are in an “original
position” behind a “veil of ignorance” (as in  Rawls, 1971). This
original position occurs in a hypothetical time before we are born,
without  the knowledge of whether we will be lucky or unlucky,
talented or less talented, rich or poor. A  risk-averse person in such
a position would want to buy insurance against the possibility of
being  born into a less fortunate station in life. In this view,
governmental income redistribution is an  enforcement of the social
insurance contract to which people would have voluntarily agreed in
this original position.

Yet take this logic a bit further. In this original position, people
would be concerned  about more than being born rich and poor. They
would also be concerned about health outcomes.  Consider kidneys, for
example. Most people walk around with two healthy kidneys, one of
which they do not need. A few people get kidney disease that leaves
them without a functioning  kidney, a condition that often cuts life
short. A person in the original position would surely sign  an
insurance contract that guarantees him at least one working kidney.
That is, he would be  willing to risk being a kidney donor if he is
lucky, in exchange for the assurance of being a  transplant recipient
if he is unlucky. Thus, the same logic of social insurance that
justifies  income redistribution similarly justifies
government-mandated kidney donation.

No doubt, if such a policy were ever seriously considered, most people
would oppose it.  A person has a right to his own organs, they would
argue, and a thought experiment about an  original position behind a
veil of ignorance does not vitiate that right. But if that is the
case, and I  believe it is, it undermines the thought experiment more
generally. If imagining a hypothetical  social insurance contract
signed in an original position does not supersede the right of a
person to  his own organs, why should it supersede the right of a
person to the fruits of his own labor?

An alternative to the social insurance view of the income distribution
is what, in Mankiw  (2010), I called a “just deserts” perspective.
According to this view, people should receive  compensation congruent
with their contributions. If the economy were described by a classical
 competitive equilibrium without any externalities or public goods,
then every individual would  earn the value of his or her own marginal
product, and there would be no need for government to  alter the
resulting income distribution. The role of government arises as the
economy departs  from this classical benchmark. Pigovian taxes and
subsidies are necessary to correct externalities,  and progressive
income taxes can be justified to finance public goods based on the
benefits  principle. Transfer payments to the poor have a role as
well, because fighting poverty can be  viewed as a public good (Thurow
1971).

This alternative perspective on the income distribution is a radical
departure from the  utilitarian perspective that has long influenced
economists, including Okun and Mirrlees. But it  is not entirely new.
It harkens back about a century to the tradition of “just taxation”
suggested  by Knut Wicksell (1896, translated 1958) and Erik Lindahl
(1919, translated 1958). More  important, I believe it is more
consistent with our innate moral intuitions. Indeed, many of the
arguments of the left discussed earlier are easier to reconcile with
the just-deserts theory than  they are with utilitarianism. My
disagreement with the left lies not in the nature of their  arguments,
but rather in the factual basis of their conclusions.

  The political philosophy one adopts naturally influences the kind of
economic questions  that are relevant for determining optimal policy.
The utilitarian perspective leads to questions  such as: How rapidly
does marginal utility of consumption decline? What is the distribution
of  productivity? How much do taxes influence work effort? The
just-deserts perspective focuses  instead on other questions: Do the
high incomes of the top 1 percent reflect extraordinary  productivity,
or some type of market failure? How are the benefits of public goods
distributed  across the income distribution? I have my own conjectures
about the answers to these latter  questions, and I have suggested
them throughout this essay, but I am the first to admit that they  are
tentative. Fortunately, these are positive questions to which future
economic research may  provide more definitive answers.

To highlight the difference between these approaches, consider how
each would address  the issue of the top tax rate. In particular, why
shouldn’t we raise the rate on high incomes to 75  percent, as
France’s President Hollande has recently proposed, or to 91 percent,
where it was  through much of the 1950s in the United States? A
utilitarian social planner would say that  perhaps we should and would
refrain from doing so only if the adverse incentive effects were too
great. From the just-deserts perspective, such confiscatory tax rates
are wrong, even ignoring any  incentive effects. By this view, using
the force of government to seize such a large share of the  fruits of
someone else’s labor is unjust, even if the taking is sanctioned by a
majority of the  citizenry.

In the final analysis, we should not be surprised when opinions about
income  redistribution vary. Economists can turn to empirical methods
to estimate key parameters, but no  amount of applied econometrics can
bridge this philosophical divide. I hope my ruminations in  this essay
have convinced some readers to see the situation from a new angle. But
at the very  least, I trust that these thoughts offer a vivid reminder
that fundamentally normative conclusions  cannot rest on positive
economics alone.


 References

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-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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