July 13, 2007 / New York TIMES
Editorial
The Land of Opportunity?

When questioned about the enormous income inequality in the United
States, the cheerleaders of America's unfettered markets counter that
everybody has a shot at becoming rich here. The distribution of income
might be skewed, but America's economic mobility is second to none.

That image is wrong, and these days it abets far too many unfair
policies, including cuts in essential programs like Head Start or
Medicaid. The poor, we are told, can use their own bootstraps.
President Bush got away with huge tax cuts for the rich in part
because nonrich Americans, who make up most of the population, believe
everybody has a chance of making it into the club. Unfortunately, the
American dream is not that broadly accessible.

Recent research surveyed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, a governmental think tank for the rich nations, found
that mobility in the United States is lower than in other industrial
countries. One study found that mobility between generations — people
doing better or worse than their parents — is weaker in America than
in Denmark, Austria, Norway, Finland, Canada, Sweden, Germany, Spain
and France. In America, there is more than a 40 percent chance that if
a father is in the bottom fifth of the earnings' distribution, his son
will end up there, too. In Denmark, the equivalent odds are under 25
percent, and they are less than 30 percent in Britain.

America's sluggish mobility is ultimately unsurprising. Wealthy
parents not only pass on that wealth in inheritances, they can pay for
better education, nutrition and health care for their children. The
poor cannot afford this investment in their children's development —
and the government doesn't provide nearly enough help. In a speech
earlier this year, the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, argued
that while the inequality of rewards fuels the economy by making
people exert themselves, opportunity should be "as widely distributed
and as equal as possible." The problem is that the have-nots don't
have many opportunities either.

--
Jim Devine /  "The tooth fairy teaches children that they can sell
body parts for money." -- David Richerby

Reply via email to