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Macroeconomic Inequality from Reagan to Trump

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  • Taylor,Lance

Abstract

For five decades, rising US income and wealth inequality has been driven by wage repression and production realignments benefitting the top one percent of households. In this inaugural book for Cambridge Studies in New Economic Thinking, Professor Lance Taylor takes an innovative approach to measuring inequality, providing the first and only full integration of distributional and macro level data for the US. While work by Thomas Piketty and colleagues pursues integration from the income side, Professor Taylor uses data of distributions by size of income and wealth combined with the cost and demand sides, flows of funds, and full balance sheet accounting of real capital and financial claims. This blends measures of inequality with national income and product accounts to show the relationship between productivity and wages at the industry sector level. Taylor assesses the scope and nature of various interventions to reduce income and wealth inequalities using his simulation model, disentangling wage growth and productivity while challenging mainstream models.

Suggested Citation

  • Taylor,Lance, 2020. "Macroeconomic Inequality from Reagan to Trump," Cambridge Books, Cambridge University Press, number 9781108796101.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:cbooks:9781108796101
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    Cited by:

    1. Ferran Navinés & José Pérez-Montiel & Carles Manera & Javier Franconetti, 2023. "Ranking the Spanish regions according to their resilience capacity during 1965–2011," The Annals of Regional Science, Springer;Western Regional Science Association, vol. 71(2), pages 415-435, October.
    2. Eric Kemp-Benedict, 2022. "A classical-evolutionary model of technological change," Journal of Evolutionary Economics, Springer, vol. 32(4), pages 1303-1343, September.
    3. John Komlos, 2023. "Viability of the Political System: A Neglected Issue in Public Finance," Challenge, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 66(3-4), pages 59-68, July.
    4. Karl-Friedrich Israel & Tim Florian Sepp & Nils Sonnenberg, 2022. "Japanese monetary policy and household saving," Applied Economics, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 54(21), pages 2373-2389, May.
    5. Stephen Thompson, 2022. "“The total movement of this disorder is its order”: Investment and utilization dynamics in long‐run disequilibrium," Metroeconomica, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 73(2), pages 638-682, May.
    6. Palma, José Gabriel, 2020. "Why the rich always stay rich (no matter what, no matter the cost)," Revista CEPAL, Naciones Unidas Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL), December.
    7. Lance Taylor, 2019. "Synthetic MMT: Old Line Keynesianism with an Expansionary Twist," Working Papers Series 103, Institute for New Economic Thinking.
    8. N/A, 2021. "RRPE Books Received: Spring 2021," Review of Radical Political Economics, Union for Radical Political Economics, vol. 53(1), pages 223-227, March.

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