They Say I Say Mccllenhands

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The ever-growing fear of the shrinking of Americas middle class has become incredibly relevant in our society because of the inevitable rising of an obvious gap between the middle class and the one percent which unfortunately will continue to grow at an alarming rate if action is not taken in some way. This makes the target audience towards a generation to fix this. This concept is covered proficiently in a variety of essays in the “They Say I Say” text by authors such as Leonhardt, McCllenhand, Krugmen and Becker and Murphy. McCllenhand is a seasoned author and journalist who confidently describes the urgency surrounding this highly-debated topic of the unfortunate reality surrounding the wealth gap in the US. McCllenhands description includes the personal experience that author has endured growing up in a simpler time in the US economy a good example was the author describing a time when his English teacher gave the example of a degenerate student who dropped out of school and ended up making more money than his teacher. I …show more content…

Becker and Kevin M. Murphy that contrary from popular opinion advocate that the wealth gap will strengthen an economy from the bottom up they use the example of China saying that “The average urban resident makes 3.2 times as much as the average rural resident” (Gary Becker 581). On the surface this seems like a perfect example of income inequality but then they go on to explain that the number of people living in poverty fell drastically. An idea that I agree with is that encouraging widespread education is never an issue for a countries overall social statues. This relates to the idea that it is hard to succeed without a college degree. Wealth gap also closes the gap between men and women income bias. What I enjoyed about the essay was that they gave a reasonable idea to decrease the wealth gap being a progressive taxing system. Overall I enjoyed the article but did not fully agree with the statements

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