Inequality and growth: the perverse relation between the procuctive and the non-productive assets of the economy
Abstract
The explosion of the global financial crisis in
2008 and its transmission to the real economies
have been interpreted as calling for new kinds
of regulation of the banking and the financial
systems that would have allowed re-establishing a virtuous relation between the real and the
financial sectors of the
economy. In this paper we maintain the different view that the financial
crisis and the ensuing real crisis have roots in th
e strong increase in incomes inequality that has
been taking place in the Western world in the last thirty years or so. This has created an all around
aggregate demand deficiency crisis that has strongly reduced prospects and opportunities for investments in productive capacities and shifted resources toward other uses, thus feeding a perverse relation between the productive and the non-productive assets of the economy. In this context the way out of the crisis is re-establishing the right distributive conditions: which cannot be obtained by a policy aimed at relieving the weight of private or public debts but calls for a redistribution through taxes on the incomes of non-productive sectors, according to a fine tuning that should prevent from excessive taxations transforming positive into negative effects.
Origin : Files produced by the author(s)