Bloomberg Businessweek Europe - 05.08.2019

(Steven Felgate) #1

◼ ECONOMICS Bloomberg Businessweek August 5, 2019


29

Age of Extremes
U.S. economic growth has slowed as inequality has increased. Of the world’s major
developed economies, the U.S. is among the most unequal.

Center for Equitable Growth, a nonprofit research
group in Washington. “That has been changing over
the past half-century and closing off opportunity.”
While the U.S. economy bounced back faster
from the 2008 crisis than Europe’s and Japan’s,
Boushey points out that gross domestic product is
an aggregate measure and says nothing about “the
very different experience across income groups.”
Many economists say inequality is one reason the
recovery has been lackluster by the U.S.’s own past
standards. Rich people spend a smaller proportion
of their income on goods and services than average
folks do. They’re more likely to invest their money
or sock it into savings, which is one reason stock
prices are so high and interest rates so low.
“You have to ask, ‘Why has the expansion been
so weak and so slow?’ And maybe the answer is
inequality,” says Torsten Slok, chief economist at
Deutsche Bank in New York. “The wealth effect
that was supposed to generate a stronger expan-
sion, well, if it’s held by just one side of Manhattan,
then it’s not a surprise if you have slower consump-
tion and growth.”
To arrest the financial meltdown that began in
2008 and get economies growing again, the Fed low-
ered interest rates drastically and bought trillions of
dollars in securities. That pumped up asset prices—
and the wealthy have benefited the most. The richest
1% of Americans own about half the stock market.
Meanwhile, wages haven’t risen much even as
unemployment has plunged to record lows. That’s
a conundrum that’s perplexed economists and
policymakers, including those at the Fed. Only
late in the decade-long rebound has pay started
to pick up, as Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told
Congress in July. “The benefits of a strong job
market have been more widely shared in recent
years,” he said. “Indeed, wage gains have been
greater for lower-skilled workers.”
The quarter-point interest-rate cut the Fed
announced on July 31 may help extend the gains.
Still, there’s a growing consensus around the world
that monetary policy has lost much of its potency,
and that governments will increasingly need to
resort to budget spending to shore up faltering econ-
omies. Kapur agrees. Compared with cheap money,
he says, fiscal stimulus is generally “more friendly to
the average person than the plutonomist.”
The resulting rise in government spending and
debt will likely hurt bonds and rate-sensitive equi-
ties such as utilities, Kapur and two Merrill col-
leagues wrote in April. Their report examined
“peak plutonomy” and other global megatrends,
including rising nationalism and a fading belief in
economic orthodoxy. (Defense and entertainment


stocks were tipped to be among the winners, in
case you’re wondering.)
History shows that inequality is driven by pow-
erful forces that are hard to reverse and often leads
to disruption and violence, Kapur says. But he sees
signs that the U.S. is moving toward addressing the
problem through elections and legislation—like it did
in the 1930s. “Out there in the political realm, the 1%,
the 10%—it’s part of the conversation,” he said. “The
antagonism toward plutonomy has spread.” �Katia
Dmitrieva, with Alex Tanzi

THE BOTTOM LINE The U.S. Census Bureau’s gauge of income
disparity is the highest since record-keeping began in the 1960s.
Inequality may be one reason the recovery has been lackluster.

Artsy Colleges


Just Won’t Die


● Even in a tough higher-ed market, few schools
ever go out of business

Like leg warmers and mullets, Bennington College
seemed a candidate for oblivion a generation
ago. Tucked away at the foot of Vermont’s Green
Mountains, the school has long shined in the now-
out-of-fashion humanities. Its famous alumni include
writers Donna Tartt and Bret Easton Ellis, not
hoodie-wearing tech billionaires. The college, which
charges $73,000 a year, almost closed its doors in the
1990s and was still struggling earlier this decade.

GDP growth rate (10-year average) Gini inequality index* World Gini values as of
the most recent year

U.S. 0.42
Australia 0.36
Canada 0.34
U.K. 0.33
France 0.33
Japan 0.32
Germany 0.32
Sweden 0.29

DATA: WORLD BANK, BUREAU OF ECONOMIC AFFAIRS; FEDERAL RESERVEGINI INDEX SCALE IS 0-1, WHERE 0 IS PERFECT EQUALITY

4%

3

2

1

0
1979 2018

0.42

0.35
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