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	<title>mattdorn.com &#187; joseph stiglitz</title>
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		<title>Understanding economics: A few basics</title>
		<link>http://www.mattdorn.com/content/understanding-economics-a-few-basics/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 13:42:10 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[ideas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[joseph stiglitz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[paul krugman]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


About five months ago, I posed myself a few questions, relating to such matters as currency exchange rates, trade deficits, and public debts, in an effort to enhance my understanding of economics.  I currently live in Argentina, a country where periodic financial crises have repeatedly thrown the country into disarray and economic depression.  [...]]]></description>
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<p>About five months ago, I posed myself a few <a class="reference" href="/content/understanding-economics">questions</a>, relating to such matters as currency exchange rates, trade deficits, and public debts, in an effort to enhance my understanding of economics.  I currently live in Argentina, a country where periodic financial crises have repeatedly thrown the country into disarray and economic depression.  Much of what&#8217;s behind my desire for a firmer grasp of the so-called dismal science has to do with wanting to understand the forces that have shaped this country.  After reading some basic economic texts (including Paul Krugman and Maurice Obstfeld&#8217;s standard text on <a class="reference" href="http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/krugman_awl/chapter0/deluxe.html">International Economics</a>) and taking a course on international finance, I&#8217;m hoping the effort I invest in answering the questions here will furnish that understanding.</p>
<p>In this post, I aim to outline a few basic concepts I think are important to understand before I can move on to the specific questions.</p>
<p>The first order of business is to ask why GDP, the bluntest measure of the health of an economy, goes up and down.  GDP has nothing to say about the fairness of wealth distribution or whether productive activity in an economy actually improves the quality of life, but in general when GDP goes up, so does employment, so we can assume that an increase in GDP usually means an increase in the welfare of a country&#8217;s inhabitants.  So why does it go up and down?  Because the demand for it does.  An economy is healthy when there&#8217;s constant demand for goods and services.</p>
<p>What happens when that demand flags?  It&#8217;s important to point out the difference between the liberal and the conservative positions on this matter.  Conservatives believe that if aggregate demand is in decline, it&#8217;s because the market has dictated such a decline.  Government intervention, they argue, will not only potentially cause inflation, but is also inherently prone to inefficiency and corruption.  It is thus wisest to allow market imbalances to work themselves out spontaneously (in the manner of Adam Smith&#8217;s benevolent &quot;invisible hand&quot;), even if it means unemployment in the short term.</p>
<p>Liberals, on the other hand, maintain with John Maynard Keynes that in order to keep demand (and therefore employment) at an optimal level, government can and should act as a &quot;demand manager,&quot; intervening with government spending or tax policy.  For example, when businesses in the private sector are not productively investing household savings, (thus running the risk of causing a recession&#8211;more on saving and investment in a later post), perhaps because they don&#8217;t judge such investment to be profitable under current circumstances, government can transfer those savings to the public sector and spend them, thus adding to GDP.  (Whether this kind of spending generates sufficient confidence in an economy to reignite productive investment from the private sector is another matter, and will vary according to circumstance.)</p>
<p>My own inclination is to agree with <a class="reference" href="http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20051101fareviewessay84612/joseph-e-stiglitz/the-ethical-economist.html">Joseph Stiglitz&#8217;s observation</a> that &quot;the reason that Adam Smith&#8217;s invisible hand is invisible is that it does not exist.&quot;  It&#8217;s a seductive notion because it involves no intellectual effort in determining which economic policy provides for the greatest welfare.  Moreover, even if it were true, it wouldn&#8217;t be necessarily useful for our purposes here because the reality is that governments intervene in markets all the time.  The sort of intervention that interests us here is called macroeconomic policy.</p>
<p>Departing a bit from the simplicity of the above analysis, we can summarize the fundamental goal of macroeconomic policy as equilibrium, both internal (domestic) and external (foreign trade).</p>
<p>Internal balance consists in maintaining full employment of an economy&#8217;s resources (human and otherwise) without the kind of &quot;overheating&quot; that can cause prices to rise.  With this balance comes stability and predictability, which makes it easier for the private business sector to identify and invest in profitable opportunities, and which in turn spurs the kind of activity that keeps an economy&#8217;s resources productively employed.</p>
<p>External balance is a bit more difficult to define, and requires a basic understanding of what is called the &quot;balance of payments&quot; (BOP).  The BOP involves tracking two types of transactions in two different accounts:</p>
<ol class="arabic simple">
<li>Transactions involving the export and import of goods and services are entered into the &quot;current account.&quot;</li>
<li>Transactions involving the purchase or sale of assets are entered into the &quot;capital account.&quot;  That sort of activity can involve &quot;direct investment&quot; like buying plants and equipment in another country, or &quot;portfolio investment&quot; like buying stocks or bonds (including government debt like US Treasury bonds, widely held throughout the world).</li>
</ol>
<p>(Note that I&#8217;m primarily trying to provide a layman&#8217;s summary here and want to avoid too much economic jargon, but because the idea of a &quot;current account deficit&quot; or surplus frequently appears in the news media, I think it&#8217;s important to flesh out a little.)</p>
<p>The rule of double-entry bookkeeping applies here: Every international transaction enters the BOP twice, once as a credit and once as a debit.  Krugman and Obstfeld provide a useful example which I condense here:</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>A US resident buys an Olivetti (Italian) typewriter for $1,000 in US currency (i.e., purchases an import), therefore a $1,000 debit is entered into the US current account</li>
<li>Olivetti deposits the check, say, in an American bank, which is in effect a purchase of a US asset, a bank deposit worth $1,000, therefore a $1,000 credit is entered into the US capital account</li>
</ul>
<p>Adding the current account and capital account together always produce a sum of zero.  If a country has a current account deficit (i.e., the sum of the current account is a negative number)&#8211;that is, if it imports more than it exports&#8211;then it must sell assets abroad to finance consumption of those exports.  Those sales can be either public (e.g., in the form of government bonds) or private (e.g., in the sale of company stock or other assets), and they result in credits in the capital account (the sum is a positive number).</p>
<p>Now, very generally speaking, in order to maintain external balance, a country should avoid an excessive current account deficit.  Depending on a country&#8217;s circumstances, investors may regard that deficit as unsustainable&#8211;investor disfavor could result in pressure for currency devaluation (for reasons that I hope will become clearer in a subsequent post) or eventual debt default and consequently, lack of access to credit.  On the other hand, if a current account deficit is the result of borrowing to finance productive investment (as opposed to financing consumption), it might be sustained over long periods of time.  (As I may return to in subsequent post, the United States currently appears to be an exception to this rule.)  So the definition of what constitutes an &quot;excessive&quot; deficit will vary widely according to circumstances.</p>
<p>Ideally, of course, economic policy would achieve internal and external balance simultaneously.  Trying to restore internal balance during an economic downturn by stimulating aggregate demand might involve fiscal expansion (increasing government spending or lowering taxes), which could worsen the current account and upset external balance.  On the other hand, using exchange rate adjustment (i.e., devaluating the currency) can make domestic goods cheaper relative to those sold abroad, thus stimulating domestic demand, and also stimulate demand abroad for exports, thus improving the current account.  Some mix of both of these kinds of measures is generally needed, at least for countries under floating exchange regimes.</p>
<p>Often the twin goals of internal and external balance come into conflict with one another, particularly in a system of fixed exchange rates.  In the era of the gold standard in the fifty odd years prior to the First World War, for example, there was a consensus among nations that the most important economic goal was to limit global monetary growth and stabilize price levels.  This restricted the application of expansionary policy, and sometimes countries tolerated high unemployment rates in an effort to maintain external balance.  After the Great Depression, however, a new consensus emerged that governments were responsible for maintaining conditions of full employment, and internal balance became more important.  In economic downturns, there was now more pressure to undertake expansionary measures that might upset external balance, but which was arguably needed to restore productivity to an economy.</p>
<p>An optimistic point of view would regard this shift as reflecting a greater responsiveness to the welfare of the people under increasingly democratic conditions.  That may or may not be the case.  In general, however, we can assume that the relative weight given to internal or external balance reflects the relative dominance of one set of interests over another.  I&#8217;m currently not clear on to what extent external balance might be favored over internal balance in the United States, nor who might be the beneficiaries of that preference.  But I do know that in the cases of Argentina and other countries who have depended on the guidance of the International Monetary Fund (of which the United States is the largest shareholder) during the emerging market crises of the last 10 or 15 years, expansionary policy was anathema.  The prescription in those cases invariably involved restoring a favorable current account balance, often with extremely severe domestic consequences in terms of unemployment, etc.  Clearly, the beneficiaries were not those who rely on worker&#8217;s wages to provide for their families.</p>
<p>One final aspect of contemporary economics that I think is important to note is the consensus among nearly all responsible economists regarding the benefits of free markets (keeping government intervention to a minimum) and free trade (lowering barriers like tariffs).  Economists do, however, tend to disagree on the circumstances under which a country can harness those benefits.  Market fundamentalists on the far end of the conservative side tend to deny in the face of all empirical evidence the legitimacy of such conditionality&#8211;free markets in themselves, they argue, provide the greatest possible benefits under any conceivable circumstances.  Nevertheless both sides agree in line with classical economic theory that free markets for both goods and capital, lowering barriers to trade, etc., are fundamental goods.  Dissenters are typically derided as &quot;neomercantilist&quot; fringe cases.  (&quot;Mercantilism&quot; refers to an economic outlook which prevailed prior to the emergence of classical economic theory, and which regards international trade as a zero-sum game, as opposed to the win-win perspective of free market economics.)</p>
<p><strong>Next time:</strong> Exchange rates: why a haircut costs me $2 in Buenos Aires and $11 in Holland, Michigan.</p>
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		<title>Two books on &#8220;market fundamentalism&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.mattdorn.com/content/two-books-on-market-fundamentalism/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Nov 2003 16:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mdorn</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[ideas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[joseph stiglitz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tom frank]]></category>

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Globalization and Its Discontents, by Joseph E. Stiglitz
One Market Under God, by Thomas Frank

Globalization and Its Discontents
Hardcore anti-globalization activists likely greeted the 2002 publication of Joseph Stiglitz&#8217;s Globalization and Its Discontents with the sense that a justification of their protests from a mainstream, authoritative source had arrived. After all, Stiglitz is a Nobel Prize-winning economist [...]]]></description>
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<p><em>Globalization and Its Discontents</em>, by Joseph E. Stiglitz</p>
<p><em>One Market Under God</em>, by Thomas Frank</p>
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<h2><a id="globalization-and-its-discontents" name="globalization-and-its-discontents">Globalization and Its Discontents</a></h2>
<p>Hardcore anti-globalization activists likely greeted the 2002 publication of Joseph Stiglitz&#8217;s <em>Globalization and Its Discontents</em> with the sense that a justification of their protests from a mainstream, authoritative source had arrived. After all, Stiglitz is a Nobel Prize-winning economist who has served as President Clinton&#8217;s chief economic adviser and president of the World Bank. But the book&#8217;s message is not so simple. From the outset, Stiglitz maintains alongside his ideological adversaries not only that globalization is here to stay, but that it carries with it the potential for improving the lot of the world&#8217;s poor.</p>
<p>Where Stiglitz parts company with his opponents is in his objection to what he terms &quot;market fundamentalism,&quot; an ideology which holds that unregulated, unrestrained free market capitalism is the road to prosperity for all. Stiglitz finds the &quot;Washington Consensus&quot; that governs the actions of international financial organizations like the International Monetary Fund firmly rooted in this ideology, and it is the IMF which happens to be the bete noir of his book.</p>
<p>In Stiglitz&#8217;s account, the IMF was conceived in 1944 at the famous Bretton Woods meetings, whose purpose was to devise an economic framework for the postwar reconstruction of Europe. The field of economics was at that time dominated by the thought of John Maynard Keynes, who taught that markets, left on their own, often functioned poorly, that significant government regulation was thus needed, and that during hard times, an economy ought to be treated with expansionary policies that maintain employment and stimulate &quot;aggregate demand,&quot; rather than be allowed to contract further through fiscal austerity measures which seek to reduce government spending.</p>
<p>The IMF, then, was designed to employ these Keynesian principles in the administration of the macroeconomic affairs (e.g., managing deficits, monetary policy) of countries in the need of aid. In the years since its inception, however, two things happened. First, as commonly happens in any large bureaucratic institution, the IMF fell victim to &quot;mission creep&quot;&#8211;that is, it started to extend its reach beyond its core competency in macroeconomics to offer recommendations in structural economic matters (e.g., stimulating competition, efficiency). Second, it betrayed its Keynesian heritage and took up the cause of the Washington Consensus, preaching the triumvirate of fiscal austerity, privatization and market liberalization.</p>
<p>What was the cause of this shift of allegiance? Stiglitz admits that the set of policies that came to be known as the Washington Consensus had considerable validity when first applied in Latin America during the 1970s and 80s. Governments there were profligate spenders and notoriously corrupt. Stiglitz argues, however, that these policies were later generalized and applied—with disastrous consequences—to countries whose circumstances were altogether different. Stiglitz charges the IMF and other defenders of the Washington Consensus with blindly adhering to a simplistic ideology that ignores evidence which suggests a more interventionist approach.</p>
<p>Among the most controversial aspects of Stiglitz&#8217;s book is his suggestion that the reason for the IMF&#8217;s adherence to a market fundamentalist ideology is that it works to protect the interests of Wall Street and the financial community, rather than the people of the countries where it operates. He summarizes the motivations of that community thus:</p>
<blockquote>
Wall Street regards inflation as the worst thing in the world: it erodes the real value of what is owed to creditors, which leads to increases in interest rates, which in turn lead to declines in bond prices. To financiers, unemployment is far less of a concern. For Wall Street, nothing could be more sacrosanct than private property; no wonder then the emphasis on privatization. Their commitment to competition is far less passionate&#8230;. And notions of social capital and political participation may never appear on their radar screen.</blockquote>
<p>Regarding the first of these aspects of the Wall Street mentality, Stiglitz describes a typical IMF intervention:</p>
<blockquote>
The billions of dollars which it provides are used to maintain exchange rates at unsustainable levels for a short period, during which the foreigners and the rich are able to get their money out of the country at more favorable terms (through the open capital markets that the IMF has pushed on the countries).</blockquote>
<p>The temptation to lay the blame for the collapse of developing economies at the feet of powerful rich-world organizations like the IMF becomes even stronger when one considers the hypocrisy inherent in the insistence on market liberalization in poor countries. Stiglitz offers a particularly illuminating example:</p>
<blockquote>
Bolivia not only brought down its trade barriers to the point that they were lower than in the United States but also cooperated with the United States in virtually eradicating the growth of coca, the basis of cocaine, even though this crop provided a higher income to its already poor farmers than any alternative. The United States responded, however, by keeping its markets closed to alternative agriculture products, like sugar, that Bolivia&#8217;s farmers might have produced for export&#8211;had America&#8217;s markets been open to them.</blockquote>
<p>As recent events at the WTO meetings in Mexico have shown, Western European countries have proved similarly unwilling to open its markets.</p>
<p>But rather than charging IMF leadership with malicious greed, Stiglitz claims that they are (mis)guided by the notion that &quot;what the financial community views as good for the global economy is good for the global economy and should be done. In some instances,&quot; Stiglitz concedes, &quot;this is true; in many it is not.&quot; Stiglitz asks that the IMF and other global financial institutions discard uncritical ideology as a basis for decision-making and pay closer attention to empirical evidence that shows &quot;what works&quot; in restoring health to an ailing economy. As Stiglitz implies, with a rational approach of this kind we can expect that in some cases the interests of the financial community will intersect with those of citizens of countries under IMF tutelage; in others, they will not.</p>
<p>IMF policy failures in countries like Indonesia and Argentina showed that &quot;excessive austerity led to high unemployment, without an adequate safety net, which in turn contributed to high levels of urban violence, an environment hardly conducive to investment.&quot; Stiglitz, like Keynes, places a premium on policies that encourage stability by, for example, maintaining high employment and availability of public services, and which thereby honor the &quot;social contract&quot; that binds a government to its constituents. One way that the IMF can become an organ which fosters respect for that contract is to become more transparent. As Stiglitz notes, international financial organizations are not subject to the kind of transparency that characterizes other organizations in a democratic society—too many of its dealings go on behind closed doors. There&#8217;s no equivalent to the Freedom of Information Act to permit ordinary citizens access to the activities of these entities.</p>
<p>Stiglitz&#8217;s recommendations for dealing with countries in need of economic aid contrast notions like &quot;gradualism&quot; and &quot;sequencing&quot; with the privatize, liberalize, and economize now approach employed by the IMF, and offers case studies showing how countries such as Zimbabwe, Poland and South Korea, which ignored IMF advice in favor of the kinds of policies Stiglitz advocates, prospered.</p>
<p>The enemy Stiglitz engages is a camp that has an &quot;overly optimistic view of markets and overly pessimistic view of government.&quot; While Stiglitz provides ample evidence that markets usually cannot, on their own, efficiently generate and fairly distribute wealth, he does leave himself somewhat open to the charge of not taking seriously enough the corruption and inefficiency that can result from excessive government intervention.</p>
<p>Still, after reading <em>Globalization and Its Discontents</em> one is left to wonder where this &quot;overly optimistic view of markets&quot; comes from, and why it is so prevalent. A book that attempts to answer this question, at least as it relates to the American case, is Thomas Frank&#8217;s <em>One Market Under God</em>, a less balanced, but equally incisive and far more entertaining treatment of this same theme of &quot;market fundamentalism.&quot;</p>
</div>
<div class="section">
<h2><a id="one-market-under-god" name="one-market-under-god">One Market Under God</a></h2>
<p>The book&#8217;s title is key to understanding Frank&#8217;s originality. Frank describes the current economic arrangement in the U.S. as being marked by the &quot;diverging fortunes of top management and everyone else,&quot; in which these latter find themselves menaced by the &quot;constant threat of termination.&quot; Throughout the &#8217;90s, these &quot;top managers were enriched in proportion to the amount of power and security that workers lost.&quot; With characteristic vitriol, Frank writes, &quot;There is no social theory on earth short of the divine right of kings that can justify a five-hundred-fold gap between management and labor.&quot;</p>
<p>And yet, that justification is exactly what, according to Frank&#8217;s account, those who presided over the dubious economic expansion of the 1990s attempted to provide. In the face of stagnating wages and and ever-increasing income inequality, any such justification would almost have to be religious in character. And indeed Frank opens his book with an exhaustive catalog of examples of advertising that extols the divine attributes of, for example, financial products and computer software.</p>
<p>Still, unlike earlier attempts to manufacture the consent of the American public, the means of legitimating an economic regime which so lopsidedly favored the rich were decidedly secular in character. One of the most fascinating aspects of this book is Frank&#8217;s analysis of the political logic of the so-called culture wars, their emergence from the &quot;backlash politics&quot; of the &#8217;70s, and how the right ultimately lost them. Frank cites Republican presidential adviser Lee Atwater: &quot;In 1984, worried that the blue collar workers were becoming &#8216;liberal on economics&#8217; and without culture wars to distract them, they had no compelling reason to vote Republican.&quot; Since then, in what Franks conspiritorially refers to as a &quot;planned provocation by the right,&quot; the party has actively courted fundamentalist Christians, shoring up support for its dubious mixture of traditional morality and savagely free-market economics.</p>
<p>Frank accepts the popular notion that the culture wars exhausted themselves when the Clinton impeachment trial failed to elicit the kind of indignation from the American public that the former president&#8217;s enemies had hoped for. Indeed, the coarsening of the culture in the few short years since the Lewinsky affair is evident to any critic, moralizing or otherwise. Republican party support now consists as much of those who continue to believe in the party&#8217;s efforts to promote a conservative social agenda while uncritically accepting the existing economic regime, as it includes legions of so-called &quot;libertarians&quot; who have no use for Republican moralizing, but passionately support the party&#8217;s free-market economic agenda. Meanwhile, the Democrats, by Franks&#8217; account, have outdone the Republicans themselves in their enthusiasm for market-friendly policies such as deregulation and their evisceration of social programs once regarded as indispensable to a civil society.</p>
<p>By and large, no longer did the polity of a once Christian nation face a choice between serving God or Mammon. God was Mammon. The Market was God. The management gurus whom Frank exhaustively surveys unanimously admonished their readers to &quot;listen to the market&quot; when in doubt, even on matters outside the economic sphere.</p>
<p>The divine omniscience and benevolence of the market has proved a particularly difficult notion to debunk, according to Frank, for it preaches that &quot;markets express the will of the people&quot; and &quot;any criticism of business could be described as an act of contempt for the common man.&quot; For this reason, not only could politicians and business leaders be seen rushing regularly to the market&#8217;s defense, but so could academics, the same ones who were routinely castigated by Republican moralizers with charges of relativism and corruption of youth with unamerican ideas. Frank finds this latter situation particularly irksome, perhaps because as a committed leftist he might have expected to find natural allies in academe. But in his review of much of the &quot;cultural studies&quot; literature which defined the tenor of humanities scholarship throughout the &#8217;90s, he finds little more than the &quot;most egregious sort of apologia for existing economic arrangements.&quot; The &quot;cult studs&quot; provided a stark contrast to the Frankfurt School ideas that until recently prevailed in humanities departments&#8211;ideas grounded in a hermeneutic of suspicion regarding cultural production. Again, to infer that individuals were passive recipients of the collective output of a &quot;culture industry&quot; which may not have had their best interests in mind minimized the agency of those recipients, and therefore smacked of elitism. And &quot;no error outranked the moral crime of elitism.&quot; The cult studs reversed the polarity of the logic of the &quot;culture industry,&quot; and viewed acts of consumption (particularly of popular cultural artifacts) as opportunities for self-expression, or even &quot;transgression&quot; of the dominant order.</p>
<p>It is perhaps the breadth of the forces Frank sees deployed in the defense of the unrestrained free market which illustrates most vividly the fundamental weakness of One Market Under God. Unlike Stiglitz, Frank is unwilling to accept market capitalism as a given of modern economic life. &quot;The logic of business is coercion, monopoly and destruction of the weak, not &#8216;choice&#8217; or &#8217;service&#8217; or universal affluence,&quot; he fumes. Virtually the only category of people of that escapes Frank&#8217;s venom is the traditional labor union. Management gurus who would attempt to humanize the workplace through &quot;post-Taylorist&quot; reforms that reduce the monotony and attempt to restore creativity to labor are regarded with disdain by Frank. Similarly, &quot;socially responsible&quot; businesses are treated just so&#8211;within quotation marks. Still, Frank&#8217;s scathing account of the &#8217;90s is a welcome antidote in the face of all the evidence that we remain, three years after the era&#8217;s &quot;irrational exuberance&quot; collapsed, a society consumed by greed.</p>
</div>
<div class="section">
<h2><a id="conclusion" name="conclusion">Conclusion</a></h2>
<p>One&#8217;s response to both books depends on one&#8217;s attitude toward the free marketeers&#8217; proposition that &quot;a rising tide lifts all ships.&quot; There is little doubt that at least in America free market policies have, by traditional economic measures such as GDP per capita and ability to purchase goods, benefited a vast majority over the past fifty years. But an economics that takes seriously the notion of a &quot;social contract&quot; recognizes that in the presence of great economic inequality, a &quot;rising tide&quot; is not sufficient to guarantee a just society and a healthy political life.</p>
<p>One final quote, pertaining to East Asian countries&#8217; rejection of Washington Consensus prescriptions, from Stiglitz&#8217;s book is instructive:</p>
<blockquote>
While the Washington Consensus policies paid little attention to inequality, arguing implicitly or explicitly that the benefits would trickle down to the poor, the East Asian governments worked actively to reduce poverty and limit inequality, believing that such policies were important for maintaining social cohesion, which was necessary for a climate favorable to investment and growth.</blockquote>
<p>Among the many virtues of The Economist is that it&#8217;s a publication that constantly questioning its own presuppositions, which are firmly rooted in liberal economic orthodoxy. Recently the magazine ran an article about the impact that economic inequality has on &quot;happiness&quot;:</p>
<blockquote>
In one striking example, students at Harvard University were asked whether they would prefer (a) $50,000 a year while others got half that or (b) $100,000 a year while others got twice as much. A majority chose (a). They were happy with less, as long as they were better off than others. Other studies confirm that people are often more concerned about their income relative to others&#8217; than about their absolute income.</blockquote>
<p>This sort of evidence, while not conclusive, suggests that income inequality, no matter how prosperous a nation may be in terms of GDP, is very unlikely to conduce to the kind of social cohesion that Stiglitz believes essential to sustained economic growth.</p>
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