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phurley | 12 years ago

Education outcomes, not debt fueled enrollments:

http://www.brookings.edu/research/reports/2013/06/13-facts-h... (in particular check the graducation rates based on income quartile).

Access to health care:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1483879/

Food is a harder thing to pin down. There is no doubt that americans of most any income level have access to sufficient calories, but trying to purchase healthy fresh fruits and vegetables takes up a significant portion of my monthly income (family of 5, a long distance from the bottom income levels), but I could buy huge quantities of bread and rice for much less :-)

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crusso|12 years ago

You derive such a different lesson than I do from the same facts.

You're mentioning areas in the economy that have had drastic price increases that far outpace inflation. Coincidentally, these are all areas that have seen heavy state and federal government involvement over the last 40 years.

Even the food disaster is easily attributed to the government's horrible misunderstanding of diet in the 70's and drive to create cheap low-fat (but high fcs) products.

While you see lessons of inequality, I see lessons of the danger of government interference in the economy and our daily lives.