Session 3: U. S. History

Inequality and Its Consequences

Goals

  • To better understand the cycles of inequality in U.S. history, including the roles of resources and of “capital”, of the government, and of the people.  
  • To understand why and how growth with equality from WW II to the 1970s switched to growth with escalating inequality and the meaning of the current predicament. 
  • To see how economic inequality is a hidden force behind so many of our social ills.
  • Historical Cycles of the US Economy:  British Economic Colonialism (24-26), Infant Industries & Banks (42-47), Commercial Expansion & the Eire Canal (49-55), Lords of the Manor, Slaves, & Opium (57-65), Bankers & Monopolists (70-75), Andrew Jackson vs Henry Clay (100-109), Radical Economics of the Civil War (129-139), Lincoln & Railroads (141-143), Oil & Steel (160-163), Labor Fights Back (170-173), Anti-trust Law, Mergers, JP Morgan (213-223), Radical Economics of WW I (239-246), Prelude to Depression (262-267), Hoover, Roosevelt, & the New Deal (275-287), Radical Economics of WW II (308-312), Oil & the Post-War Economic Miracle (331-336), Dismantling the New Deal (381-388), Financialization & Escalating Inequality (423-441), from Land of Promise – An Economic History of the United States by Michael Lind.
  • Article – Turchin on US Cycles of Inequality.
  • Video of Graeber on Debt in current politics (8 minutes).
  • Current Inequality in the US and How the System Was Rigged:  Summary (4-6), Shared Prosperity (14-16), The 1% (20-26), How the 1% Rig the Game (34-40), Mega-Corporations (49-54), Corporate Looting (56-58), Consumer Borrowing & Wall Street Speculation (60-75), Good Rules & Taxes (98-110, 115-117), from 99 to 1 – How Wealth Inequality is Wrecking the World and What We Can Do About It by Chuck Collins. Or Bill Moyers video interview with Hacker & Pierson on Engineered Inequality (36 minutes).
  • TED talk – Stiglitz on Inequality (16 minutes).
  • A variety of Short Articles on Inequality and Social Dysfunction,from Divided –The Perils of our Growing Inequality, David Cay Johnston, editor.
  • How Inequality Drives Societal Dysfunction, using International Comparisons: Poverty, pp 15-30, Social Insecurity, pp. 36-39, Trust, pp. 51-54, Mental Illness & Drugs, pp. 66-72, Education, pp. 103-108, Violence, pp. 133-137, Dysfunction across Classes, pp. 173-182, Consumerism, pp. 226-233, from The Spirit Level – Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett.

Activities

“We can either have democracy in this country or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.”

Louis Brandeis (1856–1941)