Graph #1: Real GDP per Capita, and Trend |
Graph #2: 20-year Trend Growth of RGDP per Capita (14% more in 1820 than in 1800, etc) |
Yeah. But forget the "linear trend" nonsense. Look at the blue line. Look at it since the high point of 1953. It's all downhill since 1953, at a painful rate. We're down now at the bottom of all that, with no end in sight. You want to know why the world is bad as it is today? That 65-year downhill stretch tells you just about all you need to know.
Inequality? Yes, inequality, of course. That only reinforces what I'm saying. Our economy is growing terrible slow, and almost all the spoils go to the victors. I know. And then apply the same sort of inequality to the world as a whole, where we are the ones who are doing well, and most of the world looks upon us as "the one percent".
Of course it would be better if we reduce inequality. Better for some of us, at least. But you have to remember that the people who are doing well want their fair share just like the rest of us. And the blue line has been going downhill. So when they get theirs, things are normal for them and bad for the rest of us.
Apply that to the world as a whole. It explains everything, even terrorism.
Eliminating inequality cannot work as long as the blue line is going down, because when the blue line is going down, eliminating inequality makes everybody poor. The highest priority is not to eliminate inequality, but to improve economic growth.
Part 3 of 4
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See also How inequality makes us poorer at Stumbling and Mumbling. He's got a graph showing "20-year annualized rate of growth in GDP per worker-hour" and he considers "the impact that inequality has upon economic performance."
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