I don't know how Brooks can hang his credibility on such a thin thread:
The Populist Myths on Income Inequality
By DAVID BROOKS
There are two schools of thought on income inequality. Members of the first school — populist politicians and a few economists — say the key issue is economic power.
The haves exercise more power over the have-nots. As a result, corporate profits soar, while wages stagnate. Money-drenched politicians push through shareholder-friendly trade deals that outsource American jobs while job insecurity skyrockets. C.E.O.’s get absurd salaries while the 99 percent of earners enjoy few benefits from productivity gains. Unions are weakened while manufacturing wages tumble and the middle class suffers.
In short, populists argue, the market is broken. The rules are rigged. The reigning ideology in Washington must be upended. Unions must be revived. Globalization needs to be reorganized.
The problem with this narrative is that it doesn’t really fit the facts. First, workers over all are not getting a smaller slice of the pie. Wages and benefits have made up roughly the same share of G.D.P. for 50 years. Second, offshore outsourcing is not decimating employment. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, outsourcing is responsible for 1.9 percent of layoffs, and the efficiencies it produces create more jobs at better wages than the ones destroyed.Rest here:
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/09/07/opinion/07brooks.html?hp=&pagewanted=printHere's my response to him:
Mr. Brooks,
Your arguements are specious and lack any credibility in the face of the overwhelming statistical evidence that wages are artificially low. Your cherry-picking of statistics from the Bureau of Labor is typical of the obfuscation that is the hallmark of the conservative enablers of the Bush administration.
You need a new meme.