“La mano invisible del Estado” bajo el prisma de Standard
& Poor’s Rating Services.
“A report from Standard
& Poor’s Rating Services (MHFI) last month argued that income inequality is
harming growth in the U.S.
Now S&P is back with
related analysis on how inequality harms state budgets in a way that goes
beyond their control.
”This is not going away,”
says Gabriel Petek, the lead analyst on the new report.
“We hope that investors and everyone
else that sees this recognize that all we are trying to do is understand the
factors that effect credit quality—we don’t have any particular agenda.”
….
S&P traces the origins
of the slowdown to the early 1980s, when the growth in state tax revenues (the
blue line below) started slowing at the same time that the share of personal
income earned by a state’s top 1 percent of earners (the yellow line below)
began to rise”.
Del creador del “Angostamiento distributivo”.
No todas las Administraciones Centrales, aka Estados
nación, pueden seguir sin costos políticos la vía China (Socialismo de Mercado);
ni tampoco, por cuestiones obvias, la vía Alemana (Capitalismo de Estado
Bismarkiano).
La “ancha avenida del medio” frondofriguerista, con
la que se vuelve a insistir, después de los fracasos de 1957/73; carece del “insumo”
fundamental, una “Burguesía Nac&Pop” que pretenda pasar del estadio Franco
Macri o Pérez Compac al de Akio Morita, Lee Byung-chul, Jamsetji Tata, o Sebastião
Camargo.