Supply-side economics is a macroeconomic theory that argues economic growth can be most effectively created by investing in capital and by lowering barriers on the production of goods and services.
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Noah considers the mystery of "labor's falling share of GDP":
Economists are very worried about the decline in labor’s share of U.S. national income.
He finds
four main potential explanations for the mysterious slide in labor's share. These are: 1) China, 2) robots, 3) monopolies and 4) landlords.
He goes thru the list, finding some merit and some problem with each of those explanations. Then he juggles them a bit and comes up with this:
So monopoly power, robots and globalization might all be part of one unified phenomenon -- new technologies that disproportionately help big, capital-intensive multinational companies...
That theory still doesn’t explain how landlords might fit into the picture. But it provides a possible way to unify at least some of the competing explanations for this disturbing economic trend.
Interesting. Noah is seeking a Unified Theory to explain the decline of labor share.
Here's one: Supply-side economics.
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