Myths Of Rich And Poor: Why We're Better Off Than We Think

Author:   Michael Cox ,  Richard Alm
Publisher:   Basic Books
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780465047833


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   13 January 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Myths Of Rich And Poor: Why We're Better Off Than We Think


Overview

Popular wisdom holds that the years since 1973,the end of the post-war miracle"", have been a time of economic decline and stagnation: lacklustre productivity, falling real wages, and lost competitiveness. The rich have gotten richer, the poor have gotten poorer, and most of us have barely held on while watching all the best jobs disappear overseas. As Myths of Rich and Poor demonstrates, this picture is not just wrong, it's spectacularly wrong. The hard numbers, simple facts, and iconoclastic arguments of this book will change the way you think about the American economy.

Full Product Details

Author:   Michael Cox ,  Richard Alm
Publisher:   Basic Books
Imprint:   Basic Books
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.285kg
ISBN:  

9780465047833


ISBN 10:   0465047831
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   13 January 2000
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Myths About Income And Living Standards * Waking Up to Good Times * New and Improved! * Time for Symphonies and Softball * By Our Own Bootstraps * Still on Top of the World Myths About Jobs * The Upside of Downsizing * Somebody Always Flipped Hamburgers * The Economy at Light Speed * The Great American Growth Machine * Epilogue

Reviews

Cox, a Federal Reserve economist and adviser to the CATO institute, presents, with Dallas Morning News business reporter Aim, an aggressively rosy report on the nation's economy. I'm all right, Jack, and so are you, they say. Forget eroding living standards, foreign competition, rapacious CEOs, hedge fund crashes and endemic downsizing. Times, on the whole, have never been better, say the authors, and to prove it they offer a plenitude of charts, tables, statistics and figures. It is in the nature of capitalism that there are occasional disruptions - such as corporate downsizing - which they call churning, but this is still the best economic system, they claim: Layoffs aren't a sign of failure, not for the economy, not even for most workers. Layoffs take place beside job creation. That a midlevel manager fired from AT&T might, with luck, finally end up as a low-level associate at Wal-Mart is part of the chum, not part of the hard numbers that define broad trends, averages, medians, per capita figures and rates of change. Good times, the numbers say, are here. We have more money than ever. We spend more for stuff (like VCRs, health care, and stealth bombers) and we spend more time at leisure. In the triumph of capitalism, minorities and women are doing better, too. As we change from a labor to a service economy, technology is improving life faster than ever. Don't mess with success, the authors say. Just protect property rights, keep taxes low, and eschew more regulation. There are, though, some unasked questions. Yesterday Standard Oil had to be dismembered; would a merger of Exxon and Mobil be a good thing today? Will the next decades be like the past 20 years or is something fundamental changing? Never mind. Just look at the numbers. Pangloss and Pollyanna tackle what Carlyle once called the Dismal Science in a polemic sure to attract dissent. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

W. Michael Cox is senior vice president and chief economist of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. He has written for The New York Times and was interviewed in Wired magazine his annual reports for the Federal Reserve Bank are often controversial and receive nationwide publicity.Richard Alm is a business reporter with the Dallas Morning News.

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