Just or Unjust Deserts

The other day, Paul Krugman had a piece in the NYT about the
“Undeserving
Rich.”
His argument is about the
question of equality in America, claiming that the rich have no right to be
rich. They just do not deserve that good fortune. He says, “While we can and should have a
serious debate about what to do about this situation, the simple fact—American capitalism as currently constituted is undermining the foundations of
middle-class society—shouldn’t be up for argument.” Well, it is up for argument.

I have noted
before
that the argument is not about inequality, but that our definition
of poverty is changing because the conditions of poverty have changed. The bottom line of poverty is not what it was
and the state of poverty in America and the world is much less dire, less miserable
than it was, generally speaking. Less starvation, less disease, fewer people
living at subsistence level. This seems to be irrelevant for Krugman, for whom income
disparity is the main point. For him, the real problem is not the poor, but the
rich, the awful 1 percent. “And who are these lucky few? Mainly they’re executives of some kind, especially, although not only, in finance. You can argue about whether these people deserve to be paid so well, but one thing is clear: They didn’t get where they are simply by being prudent, clean and sober.” 

Neither were they born to that wealth. He says that the poor still lack
opportunity, but the once poignant point of the classless society that is so American
was that each made his own opportunity through education and effort. Increasingly, this is true around the world,
as well. Given the ever-changing list of new names counted as “America’s
Wealthiest,” this is still true. Krugman
may complain, “For example, how are children of the poor, or even the working
class, supposed to get a good education in an era of declining support for and
sharply rising tuition at public universities?” Yet, firstly, a good education
does not, or should not, start at the university level. Secondly, public education is available to
all, no matter the circumstances of birth or economic circumstances. What is done with the opportunity given to
any student is another matter. Succeed
there, and universities have scholarships and grants available for the deserving
poor. Merit negates the problem of tuition; we want the deserving to prosper. There, conservatives find common ground with Krugman, though he seems not to see that. 

Finally, for me this raises
the question of who gets to
decide which person is or is not deserving in a secular world? In a world
where our circumstances were known to be some
aspect of God’s plan, then wealth or poverty at birth was not a question
of
just or unjust deserts. Krugman blames
man for the inequality of circumstances. Who does the believer
blame? Well, within Christianity, anyway, the circumstances of a birth
were no
indicator of ability or of what degree of success in terms of wealth or
power might
be obtained by an individual. What was certainly
true within the Church itself, but was also often true in public life, was that a person might rise or
fall
according to God-given talent and grace. The latter means that what would be seen as chance in
godless eyes, is not chance at all in the eyes of the faithful. A birth in lowly
circumstances was no barrier
to that grace, which is wholly God’s own, since a lowly birth made for grace. 

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