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Winner-Take-All Politics: Public Policy, Political Organization, and the Precipitous Rise of Top Incomes in the United States

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2010

Year

TLDR

The United States has experienced a dramatic rise in inequality over the past generation, yet political science scholarship has largely failed to explain the political sources and effects of this trend, overlooking the extreme concentration of top incomes, the role of government policy, and the transformation of organized interests. This study proposes a perspective that centers on organizational and policy change, identifying key policy shifts that have bolstered top incomes and linking them to organized private interests. The authors analyze major policy shifts and trace how resourceful private interests have organized to influence these changes. Recent political science research has begun to challenge standard economic accounts by emphasizing the political sources of rising inequality.

Abstract

The dramatic rise in inequality in the United States over the past generation has occasioned considerable attention from economists, but strikingly little from students of American politics. This has started to change: in recent years, a small but growing body of political science research on rising inequality has challenged standard economic accounts that emphasize apolitical processes of economic change. For all the sophistication of this new scholarship, however, it too fails to provide a compelling account of the political sources and effects of rising inequality. In particular, these studies share with dominant economic accounts three weaknesses: (1) they downplay the distinctive feature of American inequality —namely, the extreme concentration of income gains at the top of the economic ladder; (2) they miss the profound role of government policy in creating this “winner-take-all” pattern; and (3) they give little attention or weight to the dramatic long-term transformation of the organizational landscape of American politics that lies behind these changes in policy. These weaknesses are interrelated, stemming ultimately from a conception of politics that emphasizes the sway (or lack thereof) of the “median voter” in electoral politics, rather than the influence of organized interests in the process of policy making. A perspective centered on organizational and policy change —one that identifies the major policy shifts that have bolstered the economic standing of those at the top and then links those shifts to concrete organizational efforts by resourceful private interests —fares much better at explaining why the American political economy has become distinctively winner-take-all.

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