According to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Cay Johnston, most Americans, in inflation-adjusted terms, are now back to the average income of 1966. Shockingly, from 2009 to 2011 a third of all the increased income in a land of 300 million people went to just 30,000 of them, while the bottom 90 percent saw their income fall. Yet in this most unequal of developed nations, every aspect of inequality remains hotly contested and poorly understood.
Exploring areas as diverse as education, justice, health care, social mobility, and political representation, here is an essential resource--"an indispensable guide to the causes and effects of the growing wealth gap" (World Wide Work)--for anyone who cares about the future of America and compelling evidence that inequality can be ignored no longer.