Why the rich must get richer ¨è

Rich as it is, America still needs to grownot for faster cars and iPods, but to "find the energy, the wherewithal, and most importantly the human attitudes that together sustain an open, tolerant and democratic society."
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This, as the author notes, an intriguing implication. Throughout the book, Mr Friedman gives due emphasis to the role of economic externalities, such as pollution. He also emphasises that economic policy needs to take account of these if growth is to provide the maximum social and economic benefit.
But if he is right about the moral benefits of economic growth, then growth itself involves an externalitynot a negative one, like pollution, but a positive one. The material benefits of growth, chiefly in the form of extra goods and services, are priced in the marketthe social and political spin-off is not. Left to their own devices, market forces will therefore provide too little growth. Adam Smith does not have it all his own way. In principle, the analysis favours a range of pro-growth interventions.
The book brings together an absorbing and unusual mixture of material. It ranges over economic principlesempirical material to support those argumentsthe history of ideas (the notion that economic growth is morally tainted is far from new)historical accounts of growth and political change in America and Europeand discussion of ethics and economic development, with particular reference to equality and the environment.

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A concluding chapter looks at policies to promote growth in the United States. Much of what Mr Friedman has to say on this accords with mainstream thinking, but it no doubt bears repeating. He underlines the need to curb the fiscal deficit in order to encourage private capital formation, and discusses at length how to do this. He argues that limits on public spending and the reversal of some of the Bush administration's tax cuts will both be needed, together with changes to Social Security and Medicare. More controversially, he advocates competition among America's schools as a way to improve sagging educational standards.
These ideas for raising America's rate of growth, though mostly orthodox, are lent a strange new vitality by the rest of this unorthodox book. Rich as it is, America still needs to grownot for faster cars and iPods, but to 'find the energy, the wherewithal, and most importantly the human attitudes that together sustain an open, tolerant and democratic society.'

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