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November 13, 2013Are Computers Making Society More Unequal?Ever since inequality began rising in the U.S., in the nineteen-seventies, people have debated its causes. Some argue that rising inequality is mainly the result of specific policy choices--cuts to education, say, or tax breaks for the wealthy; others argue that it's an expression of larger, structural forces. For the last few years, Tyler Cowen, an economist at George Mason University and a widely read blogger, has been one of the most important voices on the latter side. In 2011, in an influential book called "The Great Stagnation," Cowen argued that the American economy had exhausted the "low-hanging fruit"--cheap land, new technology, and high marginal returns on education--that had powered its earlier growth; the real story wasn't inequality per se, but rather a general and inevitable economic slowdown from which only a few sectors of the economy were exempt. It was not a comforting story.Posted by Jim Zellmer at November 13, 2013 12:20 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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