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My colleague Alan Reynolds had an outstanding op-ed in the WSJ yesterday that sheds much needed light on the income mobility hullabaloo.
... Continue reading »
4 years ago
From the article:
Could anyone really believe most workers have rarely had a real raise in three decades? Real income per household member rose to $22,966 in 2003 from $16,420 in 1983 (in 2003 dollars)--a 40% gain.
Workers at the upper reaches of income have had large gains in the past 25 years. When spread across all workers, it looks pretty good.
Not a very well resaoned article from Mr. Reynolds
4 years ago
http://cafehayek.typepad.com/hayek
entitled "Inequality I-IV." All of the points he makes about the problems with measuring inequality in general apply to your statistic in particular. Household sizes change, time spent in education changes, and immigration rates change, and all these affect average household income independently of any actual change in income mobility. So your favorite statistic simply does not show that there is any significant percentage of Americans whose incomes have stayed flat over 25 years.
4 years ago
4 years ago
The fact is, life ain't so great at the bottom of the American ladder and it's not getting better. Whether your stay there is 10 years or 50 years is not the point.
4 years ago
4 years ago
My labor income peaked around 1999 (by working three jobs) and is now about a fourth of what it was then. I know something about the lower and upper fifths of the income distribution and also about mobility between them.