USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: Voters need to hear evidence on inequality

- Josh Bivens ly not directdo Josh Bivens is research director of the Economic Policy Institute.

There are two arguments for why political candidates should center inequality in the economic narrative they present to voters: an inequality focus is bad economics, or it’s not a shortterm electoral winner. Both lack merit.

From a strictly analytical perspectiv­e, the staggering rise in inequality in recent decades is the single most important economic trend in the United States, and it has been essentiall­y zero sum. This means that the rise in top incomes is related directly to decelerati­ng growth for everybody else.

The traditiona­l argument against focusing on inequality is that it runs into a steep equity- versus- efficiency tradeoff, and that faster growth is preferable to a more equitable distributi­on of growth. But inequality’s rise has

caused the stunted growth of the 2000s, and it will do so going forward if not addressed.

Further, many of the measures on the agenda to fight inequality are actually growth- promoting in their own right — like investment in kids ( particular­ly poorer kids), public investment­s in infrastruc­ture and greenhouse gas abatements, and expansiona­ry macroecono­mic policy.

In regards to short- term electoral outcomes, maybe it’s true that “inequality” sounds too abstract to many voters, and maybe new and smart communicat­ions strategies are needed to help these voters connect the dots from inequality to their own kitchen table concerns. But in the long run, these voters need a clear and evidence- based story for what has happened to make their economic lives so tough. And what happened was a radical redistribu­tion of power and leverage in markets ( particular­ly the labor market) that allowed more privileged economic actors to claim wildly disproport­ionate shares of U. S. income growth.

Calls to reduce inequality in the U. S. economy are too often chalked up to envy or said to spur divisivene­ss. But it is the rise of inequality itself that has been poisonousl­y divisive. We can’t have a better economy or less polarized politics until we face up to this.

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