Marc Chandler has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for 25 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. A prolific writer and speaker he appears regularly on CNBC and has spoken for the Foreign Policy Association. In addition to being... More
- My company:
- Brown Brothers Harriman
- My blog:
- Marc to Market
- My book:
- Making Sense of the Dollar
Instablogs are Seeking Alpha's free blogging platform customized for finance, with instant set up and exposure to millions of readers interested in the financial markets. Publish your own instablog in minutes.
-
Instablogged Stocks
Stocks that instabloggers have most recently written about -
Latest Instablog Posts
- 1 High-Frequency Trading, Dark Pools, Artifici...
- 2 Energen - Barchart's Chart Of Ther Day
- 3 COMMONWEALTH FINANCIAL INVESTOR ALERT - LAX ...
- 4 Forex4you Technical Analysis 22 May 2013
- 5 Meet The Speed Traders' Edgar Perez, The Wor...
-
Top Instablogs
See all Top Instablogs »









Crisis and Instability: Searching for Terra Firma 2 comments
Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors, in contrast to contributors' articles.
Share this Instablog
This post has 2 comments:
One comment: when people discuss the "increasing inequality of wealth" it always seems to me that they miss the point that a billion or so people have entered the wage economy who were not in it before. These folks' lot has improved enormously, incredibly really.
These folks ought to be included in our understanding of wealth disparity. There are a heckuva lot of them, and their improvement was huge; in contrast, there are many fewer ordinary American workers, and their standard of living has not crashed but only flat-lined. Perhaps if one defined the universe properly, the distribution has not gotten worse but better.
None of this refutes your point that the politics of envy and redistribution will be much stronger in the new political economy. That is a bad thing, but probably inevitable. For example, in China, the political self-awareness of the emerging middle class seems to be much more driven by resentment of the excessive privileges of the princelings than by concern for those left behind in the countryside who are not participating at all.
/JWG
THE FIRST GENERATION MAKES IT, THE SECOND PUTZS AROUND WITH IT, THE THIRD TRASHES IT. Kennedy family of wealth transfer.
Latest Followers
Latest Comments
Most Commented
Posts by Themes