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Economics Daily Digest: Downward mobility, the minimum wage, and abortion access

NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 28: Businessmen walk by a homeless man on the street on September 28, 2010 in New York City. A new report released by the U.S. Census Data shows that the income gap between Americans is greater than at any other time on record. The report found that the top-earning 20% of Americans received 49.4% of the country's total income. Conversely, those living below the poverty line earned 3.4% of the national income. This is the highest disparity of wealth among all Western industrialized nations.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

By Rachel Goldfarb, originally published on Next New Deal

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The Age of Vulnerability (Project Syndicate)

Roosevelt Institute Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz points out that inequality isn’t just about lack of upward mobility, but also risk of downward mobility, and the U.S. economy has made people particularly vulnerable. When a single event can push people into bankruptcy, inequality will continue to grow.

Regardless of how fast GDP grows, an economic system that fails to deliver gains for most of its citizens, and in which a rising share of the population faces increasing insecurity, is, in a fundamental sense, a failed economic system.

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