barbos
Contributor
Data does not show any of that.Completely irrelevant.
It is the sheer disparity and scale of wealth in the hands of a few in comparison to the rest of the population, both on nation and world scale, that is the problem.
Yet you felt compelled to show such comparison, which does not however show that.It is a problem right here and now, with no comparison to the past necessary.
Average top 500 CEO, not average CEO.As the figures show, in some ways it was marginally better in the recent past (western economies), the ratio between average CEO income and those below was not as great 30 years ago as it is now...which is the subject of this thread,
No it does not, your comparison is still irrelevant.So your objection fails in this regard.
Yeah, you invented the metric which suits your conclusion.The figures deal with distribution of wealth in society and the incomes of those at the top as compared with the rest of society, so student loans and possible future incomes for some are irrelevant to current distribution of wealth and the trend in which it is heading.
It's nos supposed to, it was designed that way.It does not appear to be improving significantly.
There is no issue.The super rich are not going away. Wealth distribution does not appear to be improving significantly in the short term and unlikely to in the long term unless drastic measures are implemented.
Your objection does not resolve the issue.
Actually if we use proper metric which is consumption and quality of life then divide is decreasing,3. You know who had no wealth disparity? Stone age people. The mere fact of wealth disparity increase is an indication of highly developed technological society.
Nobody is claiming that we should all enjoy equal pay and conditions. The problem is the growing divide between those at the top and the rest of society.
You contradict yourself. you can't be both better and stagnate/decline.4. The fact is, ordinary people today are vastly better off today than 50 years ago. Some may feel differently but that does not mean that they actually worse. Young people did not live 50 years ago, and old people feel bad because they are old
Sure, generally we are all better off....but this doesn't alter the situation where those at the top get ever richer while the incomes off ordinary wage earners stagnate or decline in purchasing power.
No, it's who ignores simple established fact that all these studies are trying to justify their politically motivated conclusion by means of inventing ridiculous metrics.That is the problem you ignore. That is the problem you fail to address. That is the picture that the studies and stats portray, of which I have already provided numerous examples both in Australia and other countries.
