Description
About the Author
Lane Kenworthy is Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Yankelovich Chair in Social Thought at the University of California-San Diego. He studies the causes and consequences of living standards, capabilities, poverty, inequality, mobility, employment, economic growth, social policy, taxes, public opinion, politics, and more in the United States and other rich longstanding-democratic countries. He is also the author of The Good Society, Would Democratic Socialism Be Better? (Oxford, 2022), Social Democratic Capitalism (Oxford, 2020), How Big Should Our Government Be? (2016), Social Democratic America (Oxford, 2014), Progress for the Poor (Oxford, 2011), Jobs with Equality (Oxford, 2008), Egalitarian Capitalism (2004), and In Search of National Economic Success (1995). His essays and shorter pieces have appeared at Foreign Affairs, the Washington Post, The Guardian, Boston Review, Consider the Evidence (his blog), and elsewhere.
Reviews
This is one of those rare, must-read books. It is a tour-de-force which compels us to rethink which policy formulae promote more equality of opportunity embedded in the socioeconomic order. Analyses of an impressive amount of data lead Kenworthy to conclude that this will depend less on income redistribution, and more on a welfare state that invests in its citizens' human capital and life chances via high-quality and universal social services. * Gosta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra *
Many academics and policy pundits believe that fighting income and wealth inequality is best tackled through higher taxes on the rich. In this provocative book, based on hard evidence, Lane Kenworthy advocates an alternative strategy. Fighting poverty is really improving the living standards of the least well-off, by giving more people access to income protection, capacitating child and family care services, education and training, active labor market policies and work-life balanced employment relations, public health and basic pensions. Improving equality of opportunity in this way will henceforth mitigate social inequality. * Anton Hemerijck, European University Institute *
On a topic dominated by warring screeds, this book is a welcome, balanced, evidence-based account of the consequences of inequality. This book is especially for everyone who thinks they already know all the answers about inequality-because they will find out how much they have to learn from Lane Kenworthy. * Jason Furman, Professor of the Practice of Economic Policy, Harvard University, and Former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors *
This is one of those rare, must-read books. It is a tour-de-force which compels us to rethink which policy formulae promote more equality of opportunity embedded in the socioeconomic order. Analyses of an impressive amount of data lead Kenworthy to conclude that this will depend less on income redistribution, and more on a welfare state that invests in its citizens' human capital and life chances via high-quality and universal social services. * Gosta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra *
Many academics and policy pundits believe that fighting income and wealth inequality is best tackled through higher taxes on the rich. In this provocative book, based on hard evidence, Lane Kenworthy advocates an alternative strategy. Fighting poverty is really improving the living standards of the least well-off, by giving more people access to income protection, capacitating child and family care services, education and training, active labor market policies and work-life balanced employment relations, public health and basic pensions. Improving equality of opportunity in this way will henceforth mitigate social inequality. * Anton Hemerijck, European University Institute *
On a topic dominated by warring screeds, this book is a welcome, balanced, evidence-based account of the consequences of inequality. This book is especially for everyone who thinks they already know all the answers about inequality-because they will find out how much they have to learn from Lane Kenworthy. * Jason Furman, Professor of the Practice of Economic Policy, Harvard University, and Former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors *
Book Information
ISBN 9780197817094
Author Lane Kenworthy
Format Hardback
Page Count 176
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc