Monday, December 30, 2019

PAUL KRUGMAN SAYS INEQUALITY IS CAUSED BY DECLINE OF WORKER POWER

Economist Ezra Klein interviewed fellow economist Paul Krugman for a podcast. It is a very interesting listen. Vox transcribed much of it.

The best part for me was the discussion on the robot apocalypse.  In Krugman's view, rising inequality is caused in large part by labor losing power rather than automation. Anybody who has worked in the schools in New York City in the last quarter century has witnessed that worker power deterioration personally.

From the Vox transcript:

Is the robot apocalypse coming for us all?
Ezra Klein
You’ve been criticizing Andrew Yang’s robot apocalypse theories recently. I think it’s intuitive to people that if we had more automation emerging that that would be bad for the economy and bad for jobs. But economists say the problem in the economy is that productivity growth has slowed down in recent decades, especially compared to what it was in the post-World War II era. And so if we were actually seeing what the dire robot people say we’re seeing, it would actually be good for the economy.

So is the problem that we have too many robots coming for our jobs or that we have too few?

Paul Krugman
We keep on hearing about how radical and impressive new technology is, but output per worker hour is growing very slowly. And automation is just a kind of mechanization that allows you to do more stuff with fewer workers. So I think what is actually happening is the kinds of technological change we’re seeing now are ones that are flashy and very visible to people like you and me, but the basic way we live our lives and do business haven’t changed all that much.

Now, there’s another question: Is [automation] good or bad for ordinary workers? And the answer is: it depends. Historically, there have been periods when, at least, significant groups of workers have definitely been hurt by automation. There have been other periods when the benefits of automation have been very broadly shared. But I think currently it’s a moot point because automation is not really happening at all. The idea that robots are taking away the jobs of lots of American workers just doesn’t seem to be true.

Ezra Klein
There’s a great piece in the book where you say the way you do your work is to “listen to the Gentiles” — listen to the experiences people are having, even outside of what the economics profession can see. So what do you take from the fact that it feels so true to people that technology is reshaping the economy and the technology is hurting them? Maybe there is something that the economic data is simply missing.

Paul Krugman
That could certainly be true. But I am not hearing a lot of workers talking about how robots are taking their jobs. That actually seems to be more of an elite thing.

Remember the skills gap about five years ago? Everybody important knew that American workers just didn’t have the skills to be employed in the modern economy. And then all of a sudden we have unemployment below 4 percent. But the skills gap stuff was not coming from workers saying they didn’t have the skills to operate this stuff. It was coming from Jamie Dimon and people like that. My sense is that the robot apocalypse is not actually a grassroots perception. It’s actually a particular part of elite perception.

Ezra Klein
That’s an interesting sociological point. You had a great piece on the skills gap argument and how it played a particular political sociological role at the time, which was to say that the problem is the workers themselves, and not rich people or bad policy just siphoning off money from the economy. Is that the argument here: Robots are in certain ways an out for elites who want to suggest that the pain in the economy isn’t their fault?

Paul Krugman
From where I sit, the problem of rising inequality in America is a problem of power. It’s because we crushed our labor movement and allowed firms to gain monopoly power. It’s because we set the rules of the game in a way that have really disempowered ordinary workers. That’s not an appealing vision for a lot of people who are themselves successful. They like the story that it’s about technology — that it’s all about these fancy new machines. It’s something less confrontational than saying this is all about power.


65 comments:

Anonymous said...

No, economic inequality comes from people being unable to break out of their socioeconomic status. There is plenty of proof...

Anonymous said...

Correct, and that is because the same people give the same lackluster effort, don't get educated, have no work ethic, and commit crime...1 trillion dollars a year given to poverty, nothing ever changes.

Anonymous said...

Read the whole piece, not just the excerpt. In depressed white communities, the same pathologies are occurring just like in the black community. See breakdown of families, opioid epidemic

Anonymous said...

But why is the crime rate and jail population what it is?

Anonymous said...

Washington Post found that the data in Trump’s tweet to be false. One of the most exaggerated statistics was about the number of white people killed by other white people. Trump’s tweet claimed the number was 16 percent, while the FBI’s data shows it is 82 percent. The tweet also asserted that 81 percent of whites are killed by black people; the FBI number is 15 percent. As the Post concluded, “Trump cast blacks as the primary killers of whites, but the exact opposite is true. By overwhelming percentages, whites tend to kill other whites. Similarly, blacks tend to kill other blacks. These trends have been observed for decades.”

Anonymous said...

Talk about workers losing power. Race is used by Trump and other elites for divide and conquer.

Anonymous said...

Then why does 7% of the population make up 50% of inmates?

Anonymous said...

First of all your numbers are wrong as blacks are over 12% of population and are something like 30% of the prison population. That is too high. Why?

Institutional racism (also known as systemic racism) is a form of racism expressed in the practice of social and political institutions. It is reflected in disparities regarding wealth, income, criminal justice, employment, housing, health care, political power and education, among other factors.

Anonymous said...

It's not just that they commit more crime? Graduate college less? Graduate high school less?

Anonymous said...

Look at the depressed white communities. Same numbers.

Anonymous said...

The national prison population. The national HS and College grad rates. Black males make up a small % of the population and a tremendous % in jail. The grad rates are way lower for blacks. And that is despite all of the grade fraud and gift programs.

Anonymous said...

Blacks make up a huge part of population living in poverty. When whites are put in same position, same results.

Anonymous said...

This study of violent crime in deprived neighbourhoods in Cleveland, Ohio, found that reductions in poverty led to reductions in the crime rate in exactly the same way in predominantly black and white areas, suggesting poverty, not race, is the biggest factor.

Anonymous said...

that doesnt explain the crime rate and why so few in the population make up so many in jail. 30 trillion dollars to poverty in 30 years, no change. how about all the blacks attacking Jews lately?

Anonymous said...

The racist is not going to be moved by a scientific study.

Anonymous said...

Blacks make up the jail population. Just tell me why. If it is because the are poor, and that is your opinion, then say it.

Anonymous said...

This is a thread about income inequality. Explain why certain groups always lag and those same groups, compared to others are undereducated and commit more crime. Doesnt one have to do with the other?

Anonymous said...

Racism is rampant now. I was waiting for the train today and saw a middle aged well dress white guy sucker punched by some young big black dude. I’ve seen this happen three times this year. They were attacked for being white. I’m Hispanic and look straight up white. I carry a .22 with me at all times. I’ll do the jail time if it saves my life. You Jews out there better start doing the same. The media isn’t reporting any of this. Be careful. And I blame that bitch Trump and his stank sister DeBlasio for all of.

Anonymous said...

Dude, when whites have similar poverty issues to blacks, the white crime rate goes up. It is backed up by research. Being born a certain race ain't got shit to do with being predisposed to commit crime.

At least link to some reputable study to support your view.

Anonymous said...

Paul Krugman
For most of my sentient adult life, inner-city social problems were a big part of people’s mental picture of America. There was an orthodoxy at the time that the problem was cultural — that there was some kind of breakdown in the African American family. And that’s why crime was so high. Along came the sociologist William Julius Wilson who said that those things are consequences, not causes. What actually happened was that economic changes destroyed the employment opportunities for men in the inner city and social breakdown followed from that.

If you wanted to do a semi-controlled experiment on that thesis, then take a bunch of white people, take away the good jobs, destroy their employment opportunities, and see what happens. We ended up doing that in the heartland of the United States and, lo and behold, a social collapse with opioid epidemic and deaths of despair and what not. So, I think William Julius Wilson was probably right.

Anonymous said...

635, why have blacks always had these poverty issues? Why never a change?

Anonymous said...

I don't think Krugman is correct. I just drove from NYC to upstate and didn't pass any token booths. All of those jobs are gone. Another job with benefits-gone. And God forbid someone needs help-medical, car trouble, police assistance.

Go to the bank-even the tellers are instructed to tell customers to use the machine-

We are encouraged to go to the "self-checkout" line at the store.

Who remembers when someone from the gas station pumped your gas in NY?

How many times have we called a company and had to use the automated help system? And even then they are encouraging us to "use the website".

People love their children- that's the only reason the ed deformers weren't able to get rid of teachers and put kids in front of screens all day.

Krugman's heart may be in the right place, but he needs to go out into the real world and see what's going on.

Anonymous said...

6:46,
It’s systemic racism. I recently found out my wife’s great grandfather was a famous Boston Irish mobster. She self identities as 100% wasp. Over three generations her family went from dangerous monsters to rich wasps. That doesn’t happen with Black folks.

Anonymous said...

I answered that: institutional racism.

Anonymous said...

Menial jobs are still aplenty. Look at the statistics.

Anonymous said...

So blacks get all these extra benefits, get affirmative action, they have thrown out most rules in society and school to get them more chances. Dems all begging for free college, shorter or no prison sentences, legalize weed...But they still cant get the graduation rates up or the crime rate down. They still cant get salaries up, except for raising minimum wage. When you turn on the news, all you see are black faces beating people. Sounds like racism is your default excuse.

Anonymous said...

Haha. Racism. You want stats? Jews are attacked far more than blacks. How do they do in society? Are they getting through secondary education? Becoming doctors? Lawyers? There has been a black president, never a Jewish president. Enough with the racist blame game.

Anonymous said...

What bullshit. Grad rates are at all time highs because cowards, some who comment all the time, are too afraid to fail anyone.

Anonymous said...

And those grad rates have been proven fake because we know they are fake and because those people getting those grades can only get minimum wage jobs.

Anonymous said...

Not me. I fail the most in my school. And I think it is documented that most teachers in nyc are afraid to fail students. That is why grad rates are so high. So please criticize all teachers...

Anonymous said...

Look at sentencing disparities for crimes for blacks vs whites for same crimes if you don't think there is institutional racism.

Please show some scientific research to make your point instead of your prejudices.

Anonymous said...

My facts are every time I open a newspaper or watch the news it is black after black doing the crime.

Anonymous said...

Maybe deblasio giving them gift cards, phones and mets tickets is the problem. Or maybe the fact that we let them get away with everything in school. Or maybe the cradle to grave welfare. If you all cared about black kids as much as you say you do, we should stop denying the problem.

Anonymous said...

You are the ones who admit you pass everyone so you don't get your principal mad at you. You are enablers for sure.

Anonymous said...

We are "laser focused" on student achievement. Remember, no attendance, no hw, if they get a zero give them a 50, that all averages to a 65. This is how you care about an 80% minority student body? Teaching them that this is how life will be? Unable to write a sentence at 19 years old. Cell phone in hand all day in school.

Anonymous said...

The corporate media does not usually cover the white collar crime that runs rampant amongst the 1%. You go right on thinking some stupid asshole on the street is your biggest problem.

Anonymous said...

If I get suckerpunched, get a cracked skull, brain damage, lose my eyesight or my teeth, yeah, that's a big problem. Just because I'm white or Jewish, yeah, that's a problem. In the bronx a few days ago a Spanish guy was robbed and beaten for$1. He is dead.

Anonymous said...

If this is the type we are teaching...And we know that many come from broken homes, have criminal records, have no respect, have no problem assaulting...I agree with 9:41, big problem. And we have zero protection.

Anonymous said...

Statistics and odds dude. Your chances of being attacked are quite low. Deal with it. Rode home on subway for years. Never mugged or hit. Maybe you just look like a victim. That is probably why you pass everyone no matter what.

Anonymous said...

You are a big part of the problem because you pass undeserving kids telling them they do not have to do anything. You send the message that there are no consequences for their actions.

Anonymous said...

I dont pass them. I think I'm the exception. The rest of the city clearly does

James Eterno said...

It's New Year s Eve. I never know when hell is going to break loose here but I don't want to keep moderating comments after getting emails every ten minutes that there are new comments. Could you guys please call a truce for the new year celebration? It would be appreciated.

Thank you for reading.

Anonymous said...

What about the fact that out of the teachers that started in 2013, 40% plus of them quit? Why?

James Eterno said...

Oh and Happy 2020!

Anonymous said...

You certainly have not convinced others not to pass them. You are a loner too. I worry about you my friend. I will take the advice and call it a day. Happy new year dude.

Anonymous said...

Paul Krugman predicted an immediate economic debacle here in the US following (and because of) the election of Trump. I don't think anyone has taken him (Krugman) seriously since then.

There has been a suggestion that he be awarded a Nobel Prize for being so completely and publicly wrong on an economics-related prediction. Almost unparalleled in its wrongness. Actually quite an accomplishment in a wacky way.

Anonymous said...

Was it in 1972? Liberal Daniel Patrick Moynihan warned about what would happen when we created a welfare state. How that party has changed...

Anonymous said...

Sure it's a movie, but take a look at Trading Places with Eddie Murphy and Dan Akroyd. Like I said it's a movie but it is still easy to see that the situation presented could easily happen in real life with probably very similar results.

Anonymous said...

The job is to watch students do nothing, break rules and then pass them all. Until we put our collective foot down, make them conform to rules, show respect, have deadlines, have some work ethic...The income inequality will forever remain, they will still be at minimum wage. We teach them that they can get away with everything. That is the classic welfare state.

Anonymous said...

Leftist economists like Krugman: always wrong but never in doubt.
¡Viva Venezuela!

Anonymous said...

Moynihan's seminal work on liberal policies of the "Great Society" creating devastating pathologies was released in 1965.

James Eterno said...

From 2009:

"I'm not sure if I'm one of the liberal bloggers Megan McArdle's writing about here but I'll proceed as if I am.
Distracted as I was by my out of control gloating yesterday, I never really made a point about Paul Krugman's predictive powers, but if I had, it would have been this: For literally years, Paul Krugman warned that we'd be in for some serious economic hard times when the housing bubble burst. This wasn't something he did as a game, but rather in the hope that rightly positioned people would address the problem. They didn't.

Time passed, and eventually conservative and libertarian writers--who either didn't understand what was happening, or didn't think all that highly of Krugman's liberalism, or both--began to mock him for getting his economic forecast wrong. Now, lo and behold, he wasn't wrong at all. And even if we presume that he thought a recession would come sooner than it did, the worst we can say about his economic punditry is that it took longer for him to be proven correct than he and others like him imagined it would."

Bubble will burst again this time. Nobody knows when but it will.

James Eterno said...

As for the Moynihan Report, here is part of a 2015 analysis from The Atlantic:

Moreover, the report’s ambiguities and contradictions as well as Moynihan’s decision to discuss racial inequality primarily in terms of family structure produced confusion over its aims. Many liberals understood the report to advocate new policies to alleviate race-based economic inequalities. But conservatives found in the report a convenient rationalization for inequality; they argued that only racial self-help could produce the necessary changes in family structure. Some even used the report to reinforce racist stereotypes about loose family morality among African Americans. Meanwhile, left-wing critics attacked Moynihan for distracting attention from ongoing systemic racism by focusing on African Americans’ family characteristics: Moynihan’s leading critic, William Ryan, famously charged him with “blaming the victim.”

Anonymous said...

So you think a 75% single parent household in black families is irrelevant?

Anonymous said...

64% of all US families are headed by single parents. This is societal now.

Anonymous said...

I see 65% for black and 24% for white from 2017.

Anonymous said...

Source please?

Anonymous said...

Datacenter.kidscount.org

Anonymous said...

Sorry, my numbers are from 1990s on my 64%. With all of the divorces and non traditional families now,I can't believe only 24% are single parent families.

Anonymous said...

From USCensus Bureau:

Between 1960 and 2016, the percentage of children living in families with two parents decreased from 88 to 69. Of those 50.7 million children living in families with two parents, 47.7 million live with two married parents and 3.0 million live with two unmarried parents.

During the 1960-2016 period, the percentage of children living with only their mother nearly tripled from 8 to 23 percent and the percentage of children living with only their father increased from 1 to 4 percent. The percentage of children not living with any parent increased slightly from 3 to 4 percent.

Anonymous said...

In its annual “America’s Families and Living Arrangements” data collection, the Bureau examined marriage and family, the living arrangements of older adults and other household characteristics.

It found that a majority of the 73.7 million American children under age 18 live in families with two parents (69 percent)—a decrease from 88 percent in 1960. Of those 50.7 million children living in families with two parents, 47.7 million live with two married parents and 3 million live with two unmarried parents.

Broken down by race, however, the statistics show stark differences. The percentage of White children under 18 who live with both parents almost doubles that of Black children, according to the data. While 74.3 percent of all White children below the age of 18 live with both parents, only 38.7 percent of African-American minors can say the same.

Instead, more than one-third of all Black children in the United States under the age of 18 live with unmarried mothers—compared to 6.5 percent of White children. The figures reflect a general trend: During the 1960-2016 period, the percentage of children living with only their mother nearly tripled from 8 to 23 percent and the percentage of children living with only their father increased from 1 to 4 percent.

Social scientists have long espoused the benefits for children who live in two-parent homes, including economic, educational, health and other advantages.

Anonymous said...

From Pew Research Center we get very different numbers:

As a result of these changes, there is no longer one dominant family form in the U.S. Parents today are raising their children against a backdrop of increasingly diverse and, for many, constantly evolving family forms. By contrast, in 1960, the height of the post-World War II baby boom, there was one dominant family form. At that time 73% of all children were living in a family with two married parents in their first marriage. By 1980, 61% of children were living in this type of family, and today less than half (46%) are. The declining share of children living in what is often deemed a “traditional” family has been largely supplanted by the rising shares of children living with single or cohabiting parents.

Majority do not live in a traditional family. These people do the numbers very differently I guess.

Anonymous said...

So 74 to 38 or 64 to 24, same answer. The group that is by far having more single parent households is doing far worse in every economic and educational aspect.

Anonymous said...

In the future, there will be rain. Then the rain will stop.

Anonymous said...

Institutional racism 9:54.