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If God Resides in Details, Phillips Is Doomed: A Review of The Politics of the Rich and Poor


Article # : 17183 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 12 / 1990  5,294 Words
Author : Arthur B. Laffer
Arthur B. Laffer, an economic adviser to President Reagan and the inventor of the "Laffer curve," is chairman of A.B. Laffer, V.A. Canto and Associates, a financial consulting firm in La Jolla, California.

       The danger is clear. Don't confuse Kevin Phillips' message in The Politics of Rich and Poor with the legitimate concern we all share about poverty in America and excessive indebtedness. For Phillips, poverty and debt are expedient platforms from which to launch his attack against everything that was the 1980s.
       
        Someday, we might be fortunate enough to be provided a psychoanalytic report on Kevin Phillips. Wouldn't it be interesting to see just what it takes to get an elite, affluent Nixon fan to portray himself - and his ex-boss - as defenders of the downtrodden and protectors of fuandamental moral values?
       
        Ah well. Phillips' motives are of only passing interest, but the issues his book addresses are substantial. On this score Phillips pours a vast amount of material on top of his readers, inundating them in extremis. The evidence he marshals ranges from anecdotes to tabular reproduction of government data, usually accompanied by a pithy quote from a recognized scholar. The sine qua non, however, of Phillips' genre of Reagan critics, is to provide an attack against the existing order without giving even the slightest hint as to what should have been done.
       
        CORPORATE AND HOUSEHOLD DEBT IN THE 1980S
       
        Armed with tales of credit cards and junk bonds, Phillips characterizes the 1980s as an economic fiasco, wrought by a bunch of Wall Street kids - the "paper entrepreneurs" - who foisted IOUs on an unsuspecting public to restructure basic industries. As coconspirators, the nouveaux riches California cowboys did everything they could to further this ... (1994 of 31237 Characters)
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