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February 2015

Links and Tweets for February

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The Rise in Inequality: A Young Lady or Gentleman's Illustrated Primer: The Honest Broker for the Week of March 8, 2015

- Income and Wealth Inequality in the United States: Evidence, Causes and Solutions | Rice University's Baker Institute:

The policy debate on the sources, causes and potential solutions to rising income and wealth inequality has intensified in the past few years. Recently, French economist Thomas Piketty’s popular book 'Capital in the Twenty-First Century' garnered much attention and ignited further debate about these issues. Piketty argues that wealth will inevitably become more concentrated under capitalism because the returns to wealth are larger than economic growth rates. The solution he proposes is a coordinated global tax on wealth. The Baker Institute's Tax and Expenditure Policy Program will host two renowned economists to discuss the underlying causes and consequences of inequality, evaluate the empirical evidence of rising inequality, and examine potential solutions for dealing with these problems in the United States.

  • WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION: John W. Diamond, Ph.D., Edward A. and Hermena Hancock Kelly Fellow in Public Finance, Baker Institute
  • PANELISTS
    • R. Glenn Hubbard, Ph.D.: Dean and Russell L. Carson Professor of Finance and Economics, Columbia Business School
    • J. Bradford DeLong, Ph.D.: Professor of Economics, University of California, Berkeley
  • MODERATOR: George R. Zodrow, Ph.D., Allyn R. and Gladys M. Cline Chair of Economics; and Baker Institute Rice Faculty Scholar.

As prepared for delivery:

The Rise in Income and Wealth Inequality: Evidence, Causes, and Solutions

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J. Bradford DeLong :: U.C. Berkeley, NBER, WCEG, INET :: February 3, 2015 :: http://tinyurl.com/dl20150202a

I am very happy to be here, especially as Texas is a state I get to relatively rarely. I have unusually few relatives in it, you see. When the DeLongs got to Wichita they decided to turn north rather than south and wound up in DeKalb County, Illinois. And those who did end up here decamped to North Carolina, leaving me with none until last year when my cousin Annie and her husband moved to Dallas. The last time my wife and I spent any extended time in Texas was on our honeymoon, when we were washed out of our campsite in a swamp near the Louisiana border by a midnight mid-June thunderstorm, so we bypassed Galveston and Houston and then spent a week and a half going Austin-San Antonio-Permian Basin-El Paso.

Continue reading "The Rise in Inequality: A Young Lady or Gentleman's Illustrated Primer: The Honest Broker for the Week of March 8, 2015" »


I Understand Where Martin Feldstein Starts: I Do Not Understand Where He Ends Up: Focus

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Over at Equitable Growth: Vir illustris Martin Feldstein starts by saying: downward nominal price stickiness is such a thing that we do not have to worry about deflationary spirals in consumer prices. I agree. But I do not understand where his argument ends up:

Martin Feldstein: The Deflation Bogeyman: "The world's major central banks are currently obsessed with... raising their national inflation rates to... 2% per year.... READ MOAR

Continue reading "I Understand Where Martin Feldstein Starts: I Do Not Understand Where He Ends Up: Focus" »


Liveblogging World War II: February 28, 1945: Food in the Low Countries

George C. Marshall: 5-045 Memorandum for the President:

Secret

SUBJECT: Food Relief for Belgium and Liberated Holland.

General Eisenhower informed us in his message (SCAF 210) that a serious situation exists in the 21st Army Group (Montgomery’s command) area by reason of retarded deliveries of civilian supplies and urgently requested that 100,000 tons of food be made available immediately from UK stocks for the 21st Army Group.

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Weekend Reading: Thomas Piketty vs. Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson: I Must Say, I Score This One as Well for Piketty

Thomas Piketty: Putting Distribution Back at the Center of Economics: Reflections on Capital in the Twenty-First Century: "In their contribution to this symposium, Acemoglu and Robinson present cross-country regression results...

...between income inequality and r − g and argue that r − g does not seem to have much impact on inequality. However, I do not find these regressions very convincing, for two main reasons.

Continue reading "Weekend Reading: Thomas Piketty vs. Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson: I Must Say, I Score This One as Well for Piketty" »


Weekend Reading: John Maynard Keynes: On Speculation, from The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

John Maynard Keynes: The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money: "Thus the professional investor...

...is forced to concern himself with the anticipation of impending changes, in the news or in the atmosphere, of the kind by which experience shows that the mass psychology of the market is most influenced. This is the inevitable result of investment markets organised with a view to so-called ‘liquidity’.

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Weekend Reading: Thoughts on Breaking the Web and the Blog--and Rebuilding Them. Can We Have Nice Things?

Nils: Breaking the Web: "The Deane Barker column was touching...

...in its sincerity and simplicity. Of course mobile apps break the web, are isolated from each other, and do not link to anything. You are supposed to PAY for them, not GET them for FREE. Welcome to the Market Based Universe.

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Noted for Your Nighttime Procrastination for February 27, 2015

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Must- and Shall-Reads:

Over at Equitable Growth--The Equitablog

Plus:

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How Nuts Are Markets? "Buttcoin" Edition

Live from La Farine: Izabella Kaminska: "How Nuts Are Markets When the Most Reasonable Analysis of an Asset Class Pumped by the Great and Good in Tech Is a Parody Sub-Reddit Entitled 'Buttcoin'?"

I missed this when it went by last September...

Bitcoin Price Index Real time Bitcoin Price Charts

BitCoin's blockchain: wonderful, promising innovation in distributed trustworthy computing. BitCoin: not a safe liquid store of value--hence unlikely to be a durable unit of account, or even medium of exchange...

Izabella Kaminska (September 19, 2014): Cult Markets: When the bubble bursts: "Today’s low so far on the Bitstamp exchange... is $399 and $383 on BTC-e exchange (changing quickly!).... We’re going to stick our neck out at this stage and call this the end of Bitcoin...

Continue reading "How Nuts Are Markets? "Buttcoin" Edition" »


Noted for Your Evening Procrastination for February 26, 2015

Screenshot 10 3 14 6 17 PMOver at Equitable Growth--The Equitablog

Plus:

Must- and Shall-Reads:

And Over Here:

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Evening Must-Read: Ann Marie Marciarille: Teeth Whitening at the Supreme Court: Occupational Licensing and Antitrust Law

Evening Must-Read: Ann Marie Marciarille: Teeth Whitening at the Supreme Court: Occupational Licensing and Antitrust Law: "The Supreme Court's 6-3 opinion in North Carolina State Board of Dental Examiners vs. FTC...

Continue reading "Evening Must-Read: Ann Marie Marciarille: Teeth Whitening at the Supreme Court: Occupational Licensing and Antitrust Law" »


Afternoon Must-Read: Arindrajit Dube, Laura Giuliano, and Jonathan Leonard: Fairness and Frictions: The Impact of Unequal Raises on Quit Behavior

Afternoon Must-Read: Arindrajit Dube, Laura Giuliano, and Jonathan Leonard: Fairness and Frictions: The Impact of Unequal Raises on Quit Behavior: "At a large U.S. retailer...

Continue reading "Afternoon Must-Read: Arindrajit Dube, Laura Giuliano, and Jonathan Leonard: Fairness and Frictions: The Impact of Unequal Raises on Quit Behavior" »


Dealing with "Cognitive Closure": Paul Krugman vs. Allan Meltzer

Graph 10 Year Breakeven Inflation Rate FRED St Louis Fed

Live from the Roasterie: For those who missed this last fall...

Paul Krugman on Allan H. Meltzer:

Paul Krugman (September 12, 2014): The Inflation Cult: "You find the same Groundhog Day story...

...when you look at the pronouncements of seemingly reputable economists. In May 2009, Allan Meltzer, a well-known monetary economist and historian of the Federal Reserve, had an Op-Ed article published in The New York Times warning that a sharp rise in inflation was imminent unless the Fed changed course...

Continue reading "Dealing with "Cognitive Closure": Paul Krugman vs. Allan Meltzer" »


What Is the Interaction of the Supreme Court's Forthcoming King v. Burwell Decision with Health Policy?

Over at Equitable Growth: For the first time, we have a clue as to what Republican plans are for what to do with respect to health policy in the event of an anti-government Supreme Court decision in King v. Burwell. And the Republican plan of Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse is the same as the Democratic plan--override the Supreme Court. The difference is that the Democratic override would be permanent, while Sass is only proposing a temporary override. For now. READ MOAR

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Making Do with More

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Over at Project Syndicate: If we as a species can avoid nuclear war; curb those among us who are violent because they are God-maddened, state-maddened, or ethnicity-maddened; properly coordinate global action to reduce global warming from its current intolerable projected path to a tolerable one, adapt to the global warming that occurs, and distribute paying for the costs of that adaptation--well, if we can do all of those things, the human race can have a very bright future indeed.

Continue reading "Making Do with More" »


The Puzzlement of "Cognitive Capture"

I want to label something that I see "cognitive capture", and think about it.

The vir illustris Ron Rosenbaum, however, disagrees. Rosenbaum is writing about David Corn's story that Bill O'Reilly was not in fact in a "war zone" in 1982, and about how O'Reilly is responding by saying: "you can tell that I am a truth-teller because the liberals attack me so much". And he thinks that "cognitive capture" is not a useful concept. We should pretend it does not exist. We should instead just tell the truth day by day as if we were having a reasoned discussion. And we should hope that eventually, with enough truth-telling, the chips will fall where they should:

Continue reading "The Puzzlement of "Cognitive Capture"" »


Allan Meltzer on Imminent Inflation, and Other Topics

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Some Hoisted from the Archives from Six Years Ago, Most Newer...: Speaking of people who had not done their homework, were spreading lots of wrong information, and who lack the ovaries to have ever marked their beliefs to market or apologize for their purveying misinformation, we have Allan Meltzer starting in February 2009 as the Paul Revere of the coming upward breakout of inflation.

It is a real clown show.

I paraphrase:

Continue reading "Allan Meltzer on Imminent Inflation, and Other Topics" »


Noted for Your Lunchtime Procrastination for February 25, 2015

Screenshot 10 3 14 6 17 PMOver at Equitable Growth--The Equitablog

Plus:

Must- and Shall-Reads:

And Over Here:

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Morning Must-Read: David Howell: Links Between Institutions and Shared Growth

If there were a thousand people all anxious to feed their families who had little in the way of alternative job prospects who could demonstrate that they could do my job well--well, then, it would be very difficult for my job to be a "decent" one, would it? It would still be a very interesting job. But it would also be a very low-paying job, unless I could figure out some way to extract a large share of the increasing-returns joint-production common pool and attach it to me in some durable way. And that requires that I figure out some way to block the others on my increasing-returns productive team from figuring out how to drive my wage down to the reservation wage of the unemployed guy now in Kerala who could do my job almost as well as I can.

David Howell is going to try to figure this out:

Morning Must-Read: David Howell: The links between institutions and shared growth: "[Standard] arguments leave little or no room...

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I Am Beginning to Think That the Backlash Against the Skills-Gap Story of Wage Inequality Has Gone Too Far...: Focus

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Over at Equitable Growth: I have always been impressed by vir illustris Mark Hoekstra's regression-discontinuity story of the value of being admitted to U.T. Austin. As the very sharp Jordan Weissman reports:

Jordan Weissman: Does It Matter Where You Go to College?: "Study 3: IF I CAN'T GET INTO A GOOD STATE SCHOOL...

...AM I DOOMED? Actually, yeah. You might be.... Mark Hoekstra... compared the earnings of white, male students who had barely missed the admissions cut-off for an unnamed public flagship university to those of students who had barely been accepted.... Enrolling at the flagship increased wages by 20 percent...

READ MOAR

Continue reading "I Am Beginning to Think That the Backlash Against the Skills-Gap Story of Wage Inequality Has Gone Too Far...: Focus" »


Morning Must-Read: Òscar Jordà, Moritz Schularick, and Alan Taylor: Monetary Policy and Housing Prices: Lessons from 140 Years

Morning Must-Read: Òscar Jordà, Moritz Schularick, and Alan Taylor: Monetary Policy and Housing Prices: Lessons from 140 Years: "Housing played a major role in the Global Crisis...

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Liveblogging History: 299 BC

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Wikipedia: 299 BC:

  • Mediterranean: The Samnites, seizing their chance when Rome is engaged on the Lombard plain, start the third Samnite War with a collection of mercenaries from Gaul, Sabine, and Etruscan allies to help them.

  • China: The state of Qin attacks eight cities of the state of Chu. Chu then sends an envoy to ask the King of Huai to go to Qin to negotiate peace. Qu Yuan risks his life to go up to the court to persuade the King of Huai not to go to the negotiation. King Wuling of Zhao abdicates the throne of Zhao to his son.


Leon Trotsky's Not-Entirely-Reliable-Narrator View of Lenin's New Economic Policy of the 1920s

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Daily Economic History: Leon Trotsky: The Revolution Betrayed: "With the bourgeois economists we no longer anything to quarrel over...

Socialism has demonstrated its right to victory, not on the pages of Das Kapital, but in an industrial arena comprising a sixth part of the earths surface--not in the language of dialectics, but in the language of steel, cement and electricity. Even if the Soviet Union, as a result of internal difficulties, external blows and the mistakes of leadership, were to collapse--which we firmly hope will not happen--there would remain an earnest of the future this indestructible fact, that thanks solely to a proletarian revolution a backward country has achieved in less than 10 years successes unexampled in history.

Continue reading "Leon Trotsky's Not-Entirely-Reliable-Narrator View of Lenin's New Economic Policy of the 1920s" »


Re-Reading My Weblog: August 2005

I spent August 2005 getting ready to reach intermediate macroeconomics:

watching the corruption--no other word for it--of the Washington Village's "elite" press corps:

Continue reading "Re-Reading My Weblog: August 2005" »


Long-Run Real GDP Forecasts: The Hopeless Task of Trying to Pierce the Veil of Time and Ignorance Weblogging

Over at Equitable Growth: OK: Now that I am awake and coherent and caffeinated, we may resume...

I draw somewhat different conclusions from the wavering track of potential GDP since 1990 than do the viri illustres Steve Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz:

First, I think that monetary policymakers should not be looking at potential output and the output gap at all. They should be looking at the labor market. You can determine whether monetary policy is such as to accord with people's previous expectations and thus balance supply and demand in the labor market much more easily than you can track whether actual production and demand are above or below what your retrospective estimate of potential output will turn out to be.

Forecasting Trend Growth Living with Uncertainty Money Banking and Financial Markets

Stephen G. Cecchetti and Kermit L. Schoenholtz: Forecasting Trend Growth: Living with Uncertainty: "We should all be wary of anyone... READ MOAR

Continue reading " Long-Run Real GDP Forecasts: The Hopeless Task of Trying to Pierce the Veil of Time and Ignorance Weblogging" »


Noted for Your Morning Procrastination for February 24, 2015

Screenshot 10 3 14 6 17 PMOver at Equitable Growth--The Equitablog

Plus:

Must- and Shall-Reads:

And Over Here:

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Liveblogging World War II: February 24, 1945: Adolf Hitler: 25 Years of Naziism

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Adolf Hitler: 25 Years of Naziism:

The consciousness of my duty and my work does not allow me to leave headquarters at the moment when, for the twenty-fifth time, that date is being commemorated on which the fundamental program of our movement was proclaimed and approved in Munich.

The evening of the twenty-fourth of February was, under the auspices of prudence, a development the significance of which probably only today becomes clear to us in its terrible meaning. An irreconcilable enemy was already at that time united in a common struggle against the German people, in the same manner as it is today. The unnatural alliance between exploiting capitalism and destructive bolshevism that threatens to strangle the entire world today has been the enemy to which we threw down the gauntlet on Feb. 24, 1920, in order to safeguard the existence of our nation. The same as in these years, the apparently contradictory factor in the cooperation of such extreme forces was only the expression of a unique desire of a common instigator and profiteer. International Jewry has long used both forms for the annihilation of the liberty and social welfare of nations.

Continue reading "Liveblogging World War II: February 24, 1945: Adolf Hitler: 25 Years of Naziism" »


Morning Must-Read: Nick Bunker: The Future of Retirement Savings

Can we finally all admit that even though the defined-benefit pension system was inadequate the 401(k) system is worse? And that we need not a smaller but a larger Social Security system?

Nick Bunker: The Future of Retirement Savings: "Devlin-Foltz... Henriques, and... Sabelhaus focus...

...on... participation.... The participation rate among working-age households... was close to 80 percent between 1989 and 2007. But... has dropped to... 75 percent.... [And] younger workers’ participation rate has fallen below the level of previous generations of young workers—today’s young workers aren’t saving as much younger workers in years past... [with] the biggest decline... among workers in the bottom half...

http://equitablegrowth.org/news/future-retirement-savings-great-recession/


Morning Must-Read: Stephen G. Cecchetti and Kermit L. Schoenholtz: Forecasting Trend Growth: Living with Uncertainty

I draw somewhat different conclusions from the wavering track of potential GDP than do the vires illustres Steve Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz. But let me reserve that until some moment later on in the day when I am more awake...

Forecasting Trend Growth Living with Uncertainty Money Banking and Financial Markets

Stephen G. Cecchetti and Kermit L. Schoenholtz: Forecasting Trend Growth: Living with Uncertainty: "We should all be wary of anyone...

...who claims to be able to forecast trend growth accurately and reliably. Even after the fact, it takes some time to discern the underlying trend. As a result, we need to build decision frameworks--for businesses and for policymakers--that are robust to the sorts of forecast errors we have seen in the past. Consider that approach the economist’s version of Keats’ negative capability. Second, our inability to get a precise fix on the output gap presents significant challenges for monetary policy, as this is commonly used as a prime indicator of inflationary pressures in the economy. If central bankers are unsure of the size of the output gap (or even its sign), then the likelihood of policy errors rises substantially. That reinforces the view of monetary policy setting as a problem of risk management in which policymakers must balance the hazards and costs associated with potentially large errors.

http://www.moneyandbanking.com/commentary/2015/2/23/forecasting-trend-growth-living-with-uncertainty


Over at Equitable Growth: If the Rise of the Robots Is Moved from the Ten-Year to the Fifty-Year Agenda, What Replaces It on the Ten-Year Agenda?: Focus

Over at Equitable Growth: There are the different agendas at different time frames--say two years, ten years, and fifty years. The smart young whippersnapper Marshall Steinbaum reports on the growing consensus that dealing with the Rise of the Robots is on our fifty-year agenda, and not on our two-year or our ten-year agenda. On the two-year and ten-year agendas, he says, are dealing with and reversing the enormous upward redistribution that has taken place with the rise in the social, political, and economic power of the Overclass. That is:

  • Restoring full employment as a priority...
  • Rebalancing the corporation so that shareholders and the financiers top managers who can initiate corporate control transactions are no longer the only stakeholders that matter...
  • Restore long-run productive investment as a priority in public budgeting... READ MOAR

Underlying this position is a belief, perhaps, that so much of what is produced is so close to a joint Leontief product that something like the marginal product theory of distribution is profoundly unhelpful, and that questions of distribution are overwhelmingly resolved by economic bargaining power conditioned by social mores and politically-chosen institutions. Perhaps there used to be three sources of bargaining power, and thus three sources of durable advantage:

  1. Possession of the intellectual property and expertise needed to construct the high-throughput mass-production assembly lines of what used to be called "Fordist" capitalism...
  2. Control over the brands and other distribution channels necessary in order to sell the products of high-throughput mass-production factories to the middle classes of the North Atlantic who could afford to buy them at a good price...
  3. A blue-collar working class that had sufficient class consciousness to bargain for itself, and that was insulated by the requirement that the factories be located near to the engineers and to the corporate headquarters which needed to be placed so as to keep their eyes on the market...

And then, perhaps, over the past generation the third has dropped away, with the coming of globalization and the successful war against private sector unions. The rest are now themselves in flux. And perhaps they have been joined as a source of rent-extraction by those with the ability to tap into the savings produced in this age of the Global Savings Glut...

But I think that the sources of this enormous upward redistribution have not yet been properly sorted-out.

Marshall Steinbaum:

Marshall Steinbaum: The Future of Work Is Up to Us: "‘Big Thinkers’... are roughly divided into two camps...

...when it comes to the consequences of rapid technological change on the U.S. workforce... techno-optimist[s].. [and] the pessimistic view that better technology substitutes for workers and... harms them. A debate between the two... was probably what the organizers intended for an event last week hosted by The Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project entitled ‘The Future of Work in the Age of the Machine.’... Yet the debate last week actually highlighted a third position. If either the techno-optimists or the techno-pessimists are right, then we should see a major positive impact on worker productivity. But it just isn’t there... [even though] we definitely see worker displacement, stagnant earnings, a failing job ladder, rising inequality at the top, ‘over-education’ (workers taking jobs for which they’re historically overqualified), and declining rates of employment-to-population and household and small business formation.... Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers made this point forcefully....

So if not technology, what explains labor displacement?... Market practices and public policies that favor managers over workers, and those who make their living by owning capital over those who make their living by earning wages. That choice lurks behind the decline in full employment as a priority... a shift in the legal standards, mores, and incentives of corporate management in favor of the interests of [equity] owners over other stakeholders... the abandonment of long-term productive investment as a priority in public budgeting.... In 1988, Summers wrote an article fleshing out the idea that the division of rents between corporate stakeholders is what drives rising inequality. More than a quarter century later, he could not have been more prescient. The good news is that if such a profound shift played out over only three or four decades, then it’s reversible. That wouldn’t be true if it were the result of the technological trends detailed in [Brynjolffson and McAfee's] ‘The Second Machine Age.’... We know what needs to be done and how to do it, because we’ve done it before...


Morning Must-Read: Larry Mishel: Even Better Than a Tax Cut

Lawrence Mishel: Even Better Than a Tax Cut: "The challenge is to ensure that a typical worker’s wages...

...grow along with profits and productivity. There is no silver bullet, but the key is... to reverse decades of decisions that have undercut wage growth. We need to start with monetary policy.... The most important decisions... are those of the Federal Reserve Board.... Before raising rates, it is essential we achieve a robust recovery, with roughly 3.5 to 4 percent annual [nominal] wage growth.... Another short- to medium-term policy decision affecting wage growth is to avoid trade deals, such as the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership, that would further erode Americans’ wages and send jobs overseas. And... bolster... labor standards and institutions... [by] raising the minimum wage... rais[ing] the salary threshold for overtime.... Protecting and expanding workers’ right to unionize... moderniz[ing] our New Deal-era labor standards to include earned sick leave and paid family leave... stronger laws and enforcement to deter and remedy wage theft.... Wage stagnation is... a result of a policy regime that has undercut the individual and collective bargaining power of most workers. Because wage stagnation was caused by policy, it can be reversed by policy, too.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/23/opinion/even-better-than-a-tax-cut.html