Created Unequal
The Crisis in American Pay
- Author(s): James K. Galbraith,
- Publisher: University of Chicago Press
- Pages: 350
- ISBN_10: 0226278794
ISBN_13: 9780226278797
- Language: en
- Categories: Business & Economics / General , Business & Economics / Economic Conditions , Business & Economics / Labor / General , Business & Economics / Labor / Wages & Compensation , Business & Economics / Money & Monetary Policy , Business & Economics / Economics / General , Political Science / General , Political Science / Labor & Industrial Relations , Political Science / Public Policy / Economic Policy , Social Science / Sociology / General , Social Science / Gender Studies ,
Description:... The boom of the U.S. economy in the late 1990s suggests that Americans are better off than they were a decade ago, but this is not true across the board and the reason, as James Galbraith explains, is wage inequality. He contends that inequality is not the result of impersonal market forces but of specific government decisions and the poor economic performance they created. Featuring a new afterword on wage shifts since 1994, Created Unequal is a rousing book that reminds us we can reclaim our country through economic understanding, commonsense policy, and political action.
"Created Unequal is not light reading, but Galbraith's elegant arguments, passionate exposition, and profound conclusions make it worth the trouble. . . . [Galbraith] remind[s] us that the economy is and ought to be run by humans, not humans by the economy."—Joanna Ciulla, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Created Unequal is a lucid and wise explanation of why America seems to be prospering while most Americans aren't. James Galbraith takes steady aim at a variety of widely accepted economic myths and hits most of them dead center. This book will tell you a lot about the way your economic world really works."—Jeff Faux, President of the Economic Policy Institute
"[A] brilliant and iconoclastic examination of the major social trend of our time."—Michael Lind, Washington Monthly
Show description