Friday, June 10, 2016

The Economist, too, is living in a fantasy land: "The audacity of hope"

President Obama has rightly and repeatedly pointed out that anyone who believes the economy is not doing well is "living in a fantasy land."

The Economist has moved to this fantasy land. The current issue has a report on guaranteed incomes. ("Sighing for paradise to come") In it there is graph with the tongue-in-cheek title of "The audacity of hope." (That is also the title of Obama's 2006 book.) It shows that the median salaries of full-time workers in the US are basically unchanged since 2000 A.D. despite a 15% increase in GDP/capital. (Britain did better than the US in both GDP/capita and earnings.)

On top of that, of course, is the fact that fewer workers have full-time jobs and the numbers of those outside the workforce has grown considerably.



To misquote T.S. Eliot, "I'll show you malaise in a handful of dust." (I guess misquoting Eliot is one of the things people in a fantasy land do.)

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