The top five states with the highest income inequality rates all voted to reelect President Barack Obama, though no state boasted a higher rate of inequality than Washington, D.C. This is according to a study released this week by MoneyRates.com.
From Breitbart: The
study used data from the Bureau of Labor statistics to measure how
many times more money the top-earning income bracket of a state made
than bottom earners. Researchers compared the top 25th percentile
earner to the bottom 25th percentile earner and divided the sums into
each other, then ranked states by number. California, in which a top
25th percentile earner makes 2.55 times more than a bottom 25th
percentile earner, is by far the most unequal state, followed by New
York, New Jersey, Michigan, and President Obama's home state of
Illinois.
In
Washington, D.C., however, a top 25th percentile earner makes 2.6
times the amount of money a bottom 25th percentile earner makes,
which represents the biggest gap in the nation. Maryland and Virginia
both make the top ten group of biggest gaps in income, and Maryland
experienced the largest gap increase in the past decade of any state:
12.05%. Breitbart News has previously reported that eight of the 13
wealthiest counties in the U.S.A. are
in the D.C. region.
Texas and Louisiana are the only red states in the top ten.
The
state with the least income inequality is South Dakota, where a
worker in the top 25th percentile makes only 1.89 times the money
someone in the bottom 25th percentile makes. Maine and Vermont, both
blue states, follow suit. Iowa and New Hampshire, at seven and eight
on the list, round out the blue states in the study with lowest
income gaps. Arkansas, Mississippi, North Dakota, and Nebraska also
are among the top ten most equal.
Richard
Barrington, the researcher who published the report, explained
on MoneyRates.com that
the research points to two findings: Democrats are more sensitive to
income inequality because it is more prevalent in states that elect
them, and economic inequality is not necessarily a bad thing for the
state's economy. Barrington explains that, since "people in
states who supported Obama are experiencing more income inequality
than people in other states," and those people also tend to vote
Democrat, the Democratic Party has an incentive to vocalize concerns
that Republican constituents deal with less often.
Barrington
them completely rejects what those Democrats are arguing: that income
inequality is a problem that must be solved. "[D]ifferences in
income are a natural condition of a capitalist society,"
Barrington writes, adding that the study corroborates the claim that
"incentives created by income inequality make the economy more
dynamic," and that "a reasonable degree of income
inequality is actually good for a state's prosperity." He notes
that the median worker in more unequal states makes more money than
the median worker in other states.
Opponents
of the President's crusade against income equality have long argued
that wealth redistribution solves no economic problems, using
evidence from the President's own policies to prove that policies
that require wasteful government spending actually increase the gap
between the rich and poor. Government spending has
caused an internal devaluation of the dollar that
suppresses wages. Pro-corporation
tax loopholes and globalization have
done even more to increase the wealth gap, increasing corporate
profits while tearing the floor out from under the American laborer.
Economic policies are not the only thing coming out of the Obama
administration that has contributed to income inequality; a
study by the union Unite Here concluded
that the Affordable Care Act will actively make income inequality
worse by cutting wages and weakening employers.
Nonetheless,
the White House is determined to make income inequality a pivotal
issue for years to come, with President Obama calling it "the
defining challenge of our time." Press
Secretary Jay Carney denied that the Obama administration's policies
damaged income inequality when confronted with the
question, suggesting
instead that
the uptick in the wage gap began under President George W. Bush. Not
all on staff stuck to the message so strictly; one pollster publicly
described income inequality as an issue that was "a
bit overhyped."
My
comments:
Satan MASQUERADES as an angel of light and so do those who follow him. Obama
will use any argument that furthers his “TRANSFORMATION,” whether
or not it has any validity.
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