More EqualityPantheon Books, 1973 - 261 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 31
Página 55
... declining , falling , or falling apart So- cieties do not decline because they are too rich , as President Nixon would have it , but because their people are unable to find a fair way of dividing up the available wealth and power . The ...
... declining , falling , or falling apart So- cieties do not decline because they are too rich , as President Nixon would have it , but because their people are unable to find a fair way of dividing up the available wealth and power . The ...
Página 169
... decline sharply , although that feeling would be groundless as well . Only a much higher degree of income redistribution could have such an effect . THE POLITICAL PROSPECTS OF REDISTRIBUTION Neither the economic nor the social effects ...
... decline sharply , although that feeling would be groundless as well . Only a much higher degree of income redistribution could have such an effect . THE POLITICAL PROSPECTS OF REDISTRIBUTION Neither the economic nor the social effects ...
Página 228
... decline . The mixture of respect and hostility with which most people view high culture would also decline under con- ditions of economic equality , and once its association with wealth had ended , it could more easily be treated as one ...
... decline . The mixture of respect and hostility with which most people view high culture would also decline under con- ditions of economic equality , and once its association with wealth had ended , it could more easily be treated as one ...
Contenido
THE POSSIBILITIES AND PROBLEMS OF MORE | 57 |
Inequality | 102 |
Some Utopian Scenarios | 193 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 4 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
achieved affluent American argue become benefits Chapter cities conflict Consequently corporations Daniel Bell decline demands democracy democratic deviant dysfunctions earn economic equality economically egalitarian egalitarian policies egalitarian society eliminated equality of results equity example existing expectations federal functional analysis goals greater equality high culture higher important incentives income and power income equality income redistribution Income Tax increase inequality investment Ivy League kibbutz kinds Latent Functions least legislation less Lester Thurow living majority rule malaise median income meritocracy Middle America moderate-income Moreover Negative Income Tax nomic obtain outvoted minorities participation particularly percent political equality poor population possible poverty poverty line problems progressive tax proposal R. H. Tawney racial reduce require rich role scenarios sexual social status subsidies suggest teachers tion unequal urban utopian vote wages Watts plan wealth workers