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By Peter Brown
It's time to acknowledge that a strong economy in which everyone shares equally probably isn't possible in an era of globalization.
The latest evidence comes from Japan, where the end to its 15-year economic downturn is good news for the world's second largest economy, and everyone who trades with the merchants of the Rising Sun.
But, as incomes, property values and the stock market rise, and unemployment drops, there is a familiar wail from those who see the increasing gap between rich and not so rich as a terrible price to pay for prosperity.
Of course, that has been the complaint in the United States; the economic miracle that has been the U.S. economy in the past quarter century has produced uneven rewards.
There are those who see this as a fatal flaw, though it is hard to believe they yearn for the days of double-digit inflation and unemployment.
Yet they refuse to see the incompatibility of the two. They somehow believe they can repeal the laws of human nature by getting people to produce more, even if those folks aren't going to get any more out of it.
And, if you think the global economy is burying egalitarianism, just wait a few years.
When China and India become the consumer-driven, middle-class societies to which they aspire, inevitably there will be hundreds of millions of people left out.
Those societies in most have been equally poor can decide whether they like their much higher standard of living enough to tolerate the fact that not everyone is sharing equally.
Wanna bet they opt for inequality?
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