Thomas Byrne Edsall
The New Politics of Inequality
"A first-rate book that deserves the widest possible attention. It is the
best political-economic analysis I have seen yet."Robert L. Heilbroner
In the past decade, power controlling the nation's taxing and spending policies
has become increasingly concentrated in the hands of the affluentand excercised
for the benefit of the affluent. Traditional liberal beliefs in tax equity and
income redistribution have been replaced by theories justifying tax reductions
in income concentrated among the very rich.
In this book, Thomas Edsall, a Capitol Hill reporter for the Washington Post,
examines the new power centers in the Democratic and Republican parties, the
corporate lobbying community, and organized labor, and explores the changes in
United States politics that have led to the shift in economic policy under the
Reagan administration.
"[Edsall] has written a cool analysis of trends in voting patterns, union power
and the fortunes of the two major parties. . . . This first-class book [is] the
best single explanation of Reagan's success that I have encountered."Robert
Lekachman, Washington Post
"Here is a book of the first importance. . . . [Edsall] has written a cogent
and convincing analysis of a major shift in the balance of power over the past
decade. . . . In this solid work of political analysis and argument, he is extremely
good at explaining the sort of fine point that most writers on this subject
automatically assume you know."Jack Beatty, Atlantic
"Superb. . . . This is the best book on class, ideology, money, and politics
in many a political year."Robert Kuttner, New Republic
|