Economic inequality is the unequal distribution of income and wealth and it has been rising in the United States in recent decades. Questions about whether and how this rise in inequality affects economic growth and stability are fundamental to Equitable Growth’s work, which explores how economic inequality impacts individuals and families across a wide range of issues, and what policies might address these challenges.
Featured work
U.S. income and wealth inequality are no longer increasing, but a return to the equitable levels of the mid-20th century isn’t likely anytime soon
January 17, 2023
January 17, 2023
A review of federal lending to small business owners of color during the COVID-19 pandemic
December 13, 2022
December 13, 2022
Why the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is good economics
June 30, 2022
June 30, 2022
Six charts that explain how inequality in the United States changed over the past 20 years
February 1, 2022
February 1, 2022
The logistics of a reparations program in the United States
February 18, 2020
February 18, 2020
Explore Content in Economic Inequality741
Persistent economic gaps frustrate the dream of racial economic equality in the United States
January 20, 2020
January 20, 2020
Preview: Equitable Growth network at ASSA 2020 annual meeting
December 31, 2019
December 31, 2019
Equitable Growth joins 10 other organizations in endorsing the Measuring Real Income Growth Act
December 11, 2019
December 11, 2019
McGuinness brings experience building organizations and supporting data-driven policy to Equitable Growth board
December 9, 2019
December 9, 2019
Eight graphs that tell the story of U.S. economic inequality
December 9, 2019
December 9, 2019
To fight falling U.S. intergenerational mobility, tackle economic inequality
December 5, 2019
December 5, 2019
Equitable Growth’s Vision 2020 book of essays on economic inequality and growth will inform 2020 policy debate
December 3, 2019
December 3, 2019
In Conversation with Fabian Pfeffer
November 13, 2019
November 13, 2019
Higher education is not the U.S. mobility engine it could be because admissions practices are rigging the system
November 7, 2019
November 7, 2019
Explore the Equitable Growth network of experts around the country and get answers to today's most pressing questions!