News

Coming out of the pandemic, the Bank of America Institute's David Tinsley tells Fortune, "There was a narrowing of wealth ...
Connecticut’s first-in-the-nation baby bonds program invests in the state’s poorest families to help those born in poverty ...
A new study published in The Journal of Social Psychology indicates that women who express anger about gender inequality tend ...
The president has pitched his trade policies at workers who feel left behind by globalization. But that doesn’t mean trade ...
The poorest Filipino households recorded faster income growth in recent years and helped bring inequality to its lowest level ...
For many children, a variety of healthy snacks bridge a gap between lunch and dinnertime. Others eat foods that lack vital ...
But inequality hurts the richest, too — at least that’s what the philosopher Ingrid Robeyns argues in “Limitarianism,” a book coming out early next year.
Professor Goldburn P. Maynard Jr. of the Indiana University Kelley School of Business discusses the U.S. tax code’s effect on wealth inequality and how race has shaped the distribution of wealth.
“Inequality so mimics poverty in our minds that the United States of America . . . has a lot of features that better resemble a developing nation than a superpower,” he writes.