January 31, 2011
How does the income of Americans compares to the rest of the world?
You are probably upset about the screaming headlines in magazines about the demise of the American empire.  Yeah, magazine editors need to sell copies and blogs need traffic using scary headlines.  These days, anything about India or China taking over the world is to enough to scare most of us.
However, as this chart in the Times shows, American power isn’t going anywhere, and I am optimistic that in a dynamic economy like ours, eventually, simple principles of economics will make life fine for all of us again.  Yep, as more people lose jobs, they bring down wages, which allows others to hire them, and we now have a new economic order.
The Times points out:
In fact, America’s bottom ventile is still richer than most of the  world: That is, the typical person in the bottom 5 percent of the  American income distribution is still richer than 68 percent of the world’s inhabitants.
India’s poorest ventile corresponds with the 4th poorest percentile  worldwide.  And its richest? The 68th percentile. Yes, that’s right:  America’s poorest are, as a group, about as rich as India’s richest.
How can there be so many people in the world who make less than America’s poorest, many of whom make nothing each year? Remember that were looking at the entire bottom chunk of Americans, some of whom make as much as $6,700;  that may be extremely poor by American standards, but that amounts to a  relatively good standard of living in India, where about a quarter of  the population lives on $1 a day.

How does the income of Americans compares to the rest of the world?

You are probably upset about the screaming headlines in magazines about the demise of the American empire.  Yeah, magazine editors need to sell copies and blogs need traffic using scary headlines.  These days, anything about India or China taking over the world is to enough to scare most of us.

However, as this chart in the Times shows, American power isn’t going anywhere, and I am optimistic that in a dynamic economy like ours, eventually, simple principles of economics will make life fine for all of us again.  Yep, as more people lose jobs, they bring down wages, which allows others to hire them, and we now have a new economic order.

The Times points out:

  1. In fact, America’s bottom ventile is still richer than most of the world: That is, the typical person in the bottom 5 percent of the American income distribution is still richer than 68 percent of the world’s inhabitants.
  2. India’s poorest ventile corresponds with the 4th poorest percentile worldwide. And its richest? The 68th percentile. Yes, that’s right: America’s poorest are, as a group, about as rich as India’s richest.
  3. How can there be so many people in the world who make less than America’s poorest, many of whom make nothing each year? Remember that were looking at the entire bottom chunk of Americans, some of whom make as much as $6,700; that may be extremely poor by American standards, but that amounts to a relatively good standard of living in India, where about a quarter of the population lives on $1 a day.

January 4, 2011
"In a survey of 27 nations conducted from 1998 to 2001, the country where the highest proportion agreed with the statement “people are rewarded for intelligence and skill” was, of course, the United States. (69 percent). But when it comes to real as opposed to imagined social mobility, surveys find less in the United States than in much of (what we consider) the class-bound Old World. France, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Spain—not to mention some newer nations like Canada and Australia—are all places where your chances of rising from the bottom are better than they are in the land of Horatio Alger’s Ragged Dick."

Why we can’t ignore growing income inequality. (1) - By Timothy Noah - Slate Magazine