NY Times OP-Ed: How to end the great recession by Robert Reich: (Hat tip: Jerry B.)
“THE Great Depression and its aftermath demonstrate that there is only one way back to full recovery: through more widely shared prosperity. In the 1930s, the American economy was completely restructured. New Deal measures — Social Security, a 40-hour work week with time-and-a-half overtime, unemployment insurance, the right to form unions and bargain collectively, the minimum wage — leveled the playing field.
In the decades after World War II, legislation like the G.I. Bill, a vast expansion of public higher education and civil rights and voting rights laws further reduced economic inequality. Much of this was paid for with a 70 percent to 90 percent marginal income tax on the highest incomes. And as America’s middle class shared more of the economy’s gains, it was able to buy more of the goods and services the economy could provide. The result: rapid growth and more jobs.
By contrast, little has been done since 2008 to widen the circle of prosperity”…
Reich gives viable ideas for re-directing tax revenues into lasting things like education rather than more cars and consumer goods.
Also Economist Peter Morici on Tech Ticker with a sober assessment of the latest jobs data last week:
To bring up the poor nations in order to be able to purchase the assets from the more wealthy ones was in the original idea of globalism. I think that's doable.
But to share more the wealth by the rich within any nation (without real wartime) in order to survive is one tough cookie to swallow…………..Good luck!
Mike Shedlock responds…………..
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/09/labor-day-insanity-from-clintons.html