Yahoo – AFP,
Virginie Montet, 17 Oct 2014
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Businessmen
walk by a homeless man on the street on September 28, 2010
in New York (AFP
Photo/Spencer Platt)
|
Washington
(AFP) - Federal Reserve chief Janet Yellen warned Friday that the gap between
the rich and poor in the United States is widening and is near the highest
levels seen in 100 years.
In a speech
at a conference on inequality in Boston, Yellen did not mention monetary policy
nor the current turmoil in financial markets.
Instead,
she focused on the widening wealth disparity and how that impacts economic
opportunity.
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Federal
Reserve Chair JanetYellen
speaks at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Boston on
October 17, 2014 in Boston,
Massachusetts (AFP Photo/Darren
Mccollester)
|
During the
recession, the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s, the richest
Americans lost money, and increased government spending helped offset losses
for the less wealthy.
"But
widening inequality resumed in the recovery, as the stock market
rebounded," Yellen said, noting that "wage growth and the healing of
the labor market have been slow, and the increase in home prices has not fully
restored the housing wealth lost by the large majority of households for which
it is their primary asset."
The Fed
chief said that wide wealth disparities can make it harder for the poor to move
up the income ladder, and also warned of the burden of student loan debt, which
quadrupled between 2004 and 2014.
"I
think it is appropriate to ask whether this trend is compatible with values
rooted in our nation's history, among them the high value Americans have
traditionally placed on equality of opportunity," she said.
'Falling
living standards'
The
68-year-old Yellen, who has headed the Federal Reserve since early this year,
is known as a "dove," referring to her policies that prioritize
fighting unemployment in contrast to "hawks" who prioritize keeping
inflation low.
In one of
her first major speeches as chair, Yellen spoke on what the Fed was doing
"to promote a stronger job market," where she said that,
"although we work through financial markets, our goal is to help Main
Street, not Wall Street."
On Friday,
Yellen said "some degree of inequality" is natural and indeed
"arguably contributes to economic growth, because it creates incentives to
work hard, get an education, save, invest, and undertake risk."
However,
that same inequality can limit access to economic resources for those lower on
the ladder, "thereby perpetuating a trend of increasing inequality."
Yellen
offered no remedies for decreasing the rich-poor gap, but said she welcomed
discussion on ways to better promote "equality of economic
opportunity."
She said
two "cornerstones of opportunity" are resources available to children
and access to higher education, but added that ownership of a family business
and inherited wealth can also be important sources of economic opportunity.
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Los
Angeles' Skid Row contains one of the largest populations of homeless
people in
the United States (AFP Photo/Robyn Beck)
|
"For
families below the top, public funding plays an important role in providing
resources to children that influence future levels of income and wealth,"
Yellen said, citing programs like unemployment, welfare, and early childhood
education.
She said
college degrees also offer a net benefit, despite escalating tuition costs that
have contributed to a dramatic increase in student loan debt -- the outstanding
balance quadrupled from $260 billion in 2004 to $1.1 trillion this year.
This debt
is disproportionately, and increasingly, affecting poorer families and may put
college and graduate degrees out of reach for some, she said.
Economist
Harm Bandolz said Yellen's speech "addresses something more important than
monetary policy," covering a topic that "might be even more relevant
for the future of the US and many developed economies."
Globally,
the gap between the haves and have-nots has reached levels not seen since the
1820s, the OECD said earlier this month, in a report that looked at trends in
health, education, inequality, the environment and personal security.
The report
said, however, that overall well-being has improved over the past 200 years,
despite the enormous increase in income inequality, in part because factors
like life expectancy and literacy, which have risen dramatically over the last
200 years.
Yellen said
that the trend in recent years in the United States has seen "stagnant or
falling living standards for many families."



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