Stiglitz
Analysis of the Price of Inequality
In the year 2013, issues of socioeconomic inequality are perhaps as pressing and problematic as they have ever been. This is the assertion at the crux of Joseph E. Stiglitz text, The Price of Inequality: How Today's Divided Society Endangers Our Future (ISBN-13: 9780393345063). Released in 2012 by W.W. Norton & Company publishers, the 560-page text is a timely and compelling contribution to the current public discourse on our need for greater economic equality in the United States.
Understanding the orientation of the text at the center of this analysis requires a more complete understanding of its author, the economist, Columbia professor and winner of 2001's Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. According to his self-composed biography at the Memorial Foundation site, Stiglitz (2001) was born in Gary Indian in 1943. By his own report, his interests as a young student would lead him to become actively involved his debate club in high-school. He even notes that some of the debate subjects that would bring out the most passion in him as a student would emerge time and again in his later career as issues of great civic importance.
Stiglitz tells that "the intellectually most formative experiences occurred during the three years 1960-1963 I spent at Amherst college, a small, New England college (at the time, a men's college with around 1000 students)." (Stiglitz 2001, p. 1) Stiglitz speaks highly of his experiences at Amherst, where he dedicated the bulk of his undergraduate efforts to physics. By his senior year, Stiglitz reports, he had become enamored of economics and switched courses entirely in order to make this his focus during his graduate studies. For these, he earned a modest fellowship to assist a transfer to MIT, where he earned his PhD and held an assistant professorship. (Stiglitz 2001, p. 1)
From there, Stiglitz would go on to become of the most decorated, accomplished and influential economists of the last 30 years. According to his Curriculum Vitae (2013), Stiglitz holds honorary doctorates for more than 40 academic institutions, has held professorial positions in a number of top universities, served as the 17th Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors under President Bill Clinton and held the office of World Bank Chief Economist between 1997 and 2000. (Columbia University, p. 1)
The true scope of Stiglitz' contributions cannot be fully contained here. However, the surface view of the author's career suggests an individual highly qualified to make commentary on the state of the U.S. economy. Therefore, the highly critical nature of the text in question comes with a strong degree of credibility.
Summary:
Stiglitz makes no mystery about his perspective on the issue of economic inequality. The author indicates from the outset of the text that his perspective is progressive in nature and highly sympathetic to the struggles of the middle class, the working class and the impoverished. Moreover, the text approaches the issue of America's economic inequality as being connected to many of the patterns that we can observe on a global scale. According to Stiglitz, the outpouring of protest and discontent that defined the 'Arab Spring' and the Occupy Movement would be connected even if separated by wide cultural and geographical gaps. Additionally, Stiglitz tells in no uncertain terms that his point-of-view has more in common with the protest movement than with the hegemonic forces standing in its way.
Accordingly, Stiglitz observes that "the protesters were right that something was wrong. The gap between what our economic and political systems are supposed to do
What we were told they did do -- and what they actually do become too large to be ignored. Governments around the world were not addressing key economic problems, including that of persistent unemployment; and as universal values of fairness became sacrificed to the greed of a few, in spite of rhetoric to the contrary, the feeling of unfairness became a feeling of betrayal." (p. x)
This offers a philosophical framework for the larger part of the text, which takes the view that capitalism has been stifled by a generation of corrupt, lawless and entrenched interest groups which permeate both industry and politics. This is almost certainly the prerogative for a text that largely condemns the forces responsible for the economic ailments both of inequality and recession. Stiglitz will proceed to lay out across the course of his text an argument that true capitalism should cure rather than intensify socioeconomic inequality. The Price of Inequality asserts that greed and exploitation have created an increasingly sharp wealth divide in which...
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