Kyle Wingfield
Income inequality has been a hot political topic in the United States. But is it as stark as commonly thought?
The Census Bureau’s methodology of calculating household income, the basis for most policy debates about income, poverty and inequality, is brought into question by a new book: “The Myth of American Inequality” by former U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm and two co-authors.
Gramm (who also holds three degrees, including a Ph.D. in economics, from the University of Georgia) along with John Early (an economist and two-time assistant commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics) and Robert Ekelund (an economics professor emeritus at Auburn University) examined the census methodology after confronting a conundrum:
Why do federal data show that low-income households consume more – a lot more – than they earn in income?
“The Bureau of Labor Statistics puts out data every year saying how much Americans consumed by quintile – that is, the bottom 20 percent up through the top 20 percent,” Gramm explained in a recent discussion of the book. “The Census Bureau puts out household income.
“Well, this year the census figure shows that people earn only about half as much as they spend in the bottom quintile. In the second quintile, people spend 11 percent more than they earn, and in the top quintile people spend only about 50 percent of their income, even though there’s no data to show people are saving at that sort of rate.”
To most people, income matters because it allows them to consume what they need or want. So if income statistics don’t reflect what households are able to consume, they aren’t accurate measures of well-being.
The discrepancy lies in how the income figures are calculated. Since 1947, Gramm said, the Census Bureau’s definitions of income have excluded most non-cash benefits received, such as food stamps or housing vouchers. And these benefits have grown tremendously.
When the so-called war on poverty began in 1965, Gramm said, “we were providing $9,700 worth of transfer payments to the average household in the bottom 20 percent of American earners. Since 1965 it has grown to $45,400.”
Also left out of the official income statistics are tax credits received. Finally, tax payments made by households are not subtracted from income, even though they obviously affect how much money a household can spend on other things.
What does all this mean for income inequality? Gramm said he and his co-authors decided to find out.
“The Census Bureau tells us that the top 20 percent of Americans earn 16.7 times as much as the bottom 20 percent of Americans,” he said. “We show in this book that when you count all transfer payments as income to the people who got the payment, and you subtract all taxes from the income of the people who paid the taxes, that the ratio is not 16.7 to 1; it’s 4 to 1.
“Now you can argue that we should be transferring more resources, that we still have too much inequality,” he continued. “But the point is that the argument is very different when the ratio is 16.7 to 1, versus 4 to 1.”
The bottom line, according to Gramm, is that a proper calculation of income shows that inequality has not grown in recent decades, but in fact is lower than it was in 1947.
It’s important to note that these statistics reflect an immense amount of government redistribution of income and intervention into the economy. It would be better if incomes were more even without such government action.
But it’s equally important to note that those most vocal about addressing income inequality tend to argue not for measures to enhance market-based outcomes, but to increase government intervention even further.
Before we do so – whether nationally or closer to home – let’s be sure we have our facts right. “The Myth of American Inequality” suggests strongly that we do not.
Kyle Wingfield is president and CEO of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, found online at www.georgiapolicy.org.