Category Archives: The destruction of the middle class

The Rich Get Richer, Hedge Fund Edition

Anyone who doubts that the top 1% is getting wealthier needs to consider the factoids from this CNN Money story, “Richest hedge fund managers get richer.” John Arnold earned $1.5 to $2 billion for having bet correctly on oil prices. Four other hedge fund managers were estimated to have earned over $1 billion. The average […]

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British Ministry of Defense Has a Dystopian View of the Future

A Ministry of Defense team has been envisioning what the world might look like in 30 years (as an aside, no one in the private sector takes such a long view), and what it sees is not pretty. Terrorism will remain an ongoing threat, with intermittent, possibly coordinated attacks of greater intensity than now. Other […]

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Class Warfare in AMT Reform Hearings

For the benefit of non-US readers, AMT stands for alternative minimum tax. When individuals take itemized deductions, they must also run an AMT calculation to see if the taxes due under that framework are higher than they’d get using income – (deductions + exemptions). The idea behind AMT originally was that high income individuals who […]

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Tax Code Writing Outsourced to Tax Shelter Designers

You can’t make this stuff up. The link in the story from Washington Monthly, “‘It’s the Fox Designing the Henhouse’,” points to a New York Times article, “I.R.S. Letting Tax Lawyers Write Rules.” David Cay Johnston reports today that the IRS is outsourcing its writing of tax rules to the very lawyers and accountants who […]

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Bush Tax Cuts Mainly Benefit Top Earners, Particularly the Very Top

For those of you who like having the facts, rather than asserting the obvious and hoping you are right, Linda Beale of ataxingmatter has a good post, “The Bush Tax Cuts–good for whom?,” which has a clear presentation of who got the bennies, and why that might not be so good from an economic standpoint. […]

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Wall Street Journal Editorial Mischaracterizes AMT Woes

We’ve noted before that the Journal’s editorial pages are not the place to go if you want reality-based commentary. This piece, “Wall Street Journal AMT Editorial,” from Linda Beale on ataxingmanner (which came to our attention via Mark Thoma’s Economist’s View) dissects a recent WSJ editorial on the alternative minimum tax, or AMT. For readers […]

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Does Globalization Cause Income Inequality?

Yesterday, in TCS Daily, Tim Worstall argued that income inequality (if it exists, he wasn’t quite willing to concede that) should in fact be caused by globalization. (Note that this post was featured on Harvard economics professor Greg Mankiw’s blog, which is where we came across it). It goes on to say, “Further, I’ll argue […]

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Negative Consumer Saving in 2005 and 2006

This excellent post in Barry Ritzholtz’s The Big Picture was prompted in part by Alan Abelson’s article, “Spendthrift Nation,” in today’s Barron’s. The key point is that consumers spent more than they made for two years running, 2005 and 2006. The last time this happened was in the depths of the Depression. Yesterday, DF asked […]

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Macroeconomic Volatility Versus Volatility of Incomes

A bit of a mouthful, but the very important point of this Congressional Budget Office report, which was summarized in Congressional testimony and reported in Mark Thoma’s Economist’s View, is that while the growth rate of the economy has become steadier, the volatility of individual incomes has increased considerably. This income instability is another element […]

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NY Fed Speech on Asset Prices and Income Disparity Under (and Mis) Reported in the US

OK, so it was only a speech by the president of the New York Fed, Tim Geithner, to the Council on Foreign Relations. But the disparity in reporting between the Financial Times, both in placement and content, and the Wall Street Journal (and to some degree Bloomberg) is striking. Not surprisingly, the WSJ downplayed the […]

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