Re: Weaving the Strands: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 2.0
So who are these "1%" that make life so miserable for the envious (and for those who do not understand statistics and the concept of three standard deviations from the median)?
According to The Economist:
I saw a similar breakdown somewhere else, in which financial occupations were 14%, non-financial executives were 41%, athletes and entertainers were something like 25% - 30%, and the rest were doctors and lawyers. There is some overlap between "lawyers" and "financial occupations" because law firms work on mergers and acquisitions.
So, those "selfish, evil greedy bankers" are only about 1/7 of the 1%...6/7 of the 1% are not.
Amazing how evidence and stereotype are at odds here......
So who are these "1%" that make life so miserable for the envious (and for those who do not understand statistics and the concept of three standard deviations from the median)?
According to The Economist:
The average household income of the 1% was $1.2m in 2008, according to federal tax data.
...
16% of the top 1% were in medical professions and 8% were lawyers....financial occupations...13.9%....[non-financial executives, ~ 34%, and "others" ~ 30%].
I saw a similar breakdown somewhere else, in which financial occupations were 14%, non-financial executives were 41%, athletes and entertainers were something like 25% - 30%, and the rest were doctors and lawyers. There is some overlap between "lawyers" and "financial occupations" because law firms work on mergers and acquisitions.
So, those "selfish, evil greedy bankers" are only about 1/7 of the 1%...6/7 of the 1% are not.
Amazing how evidence and stereotype are at odds here......