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(Girl helps raise more than $30,000 for new playground set in Rainier)
(WASHINGTON- S&P- Wealth gap is slowing US economic growth)
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About 50 volunteers turned out Saturday morning to help construct new playground toys at Rainier Elementary School.But the nearly $30,000 set couldn t have happened if it wasn t for an outpouring of community support and a lot of work and persistence of 11-year-old student Faith Boesch, according to Rainier School District Superintendent Tim Garchow. Faith came to me and said, What can we do about a new playground?   Garchow recalled. I said, Well, we don t have it in the budget.   So that s when Faith and her [url=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-doctor-frame-42]Celine Doctor Frame Bags[/url] mom, Ida, decided to make it happen on their own.They wrote grant applications, organized coin drives, tapped businesses and churches for donations, [url=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-luggage-43]Celine Luggage[/url] and set up other fundraisers.They even sent a video asking television host Ellen DeGeneres for support.The Hollywood A-lister didn t respond to their request, but folks who live in the small community in southeast Thurston County certainly did. Everyone stepped up, Ida Boesch said. It s just a tremendous effort of the community, Garchow added. Everyone s gotten behind it. Volunteers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the Rainier City Council and the school district joined others in digging holes, raking rocks, securing posts and building the playground set, which is accessible to disabled students and features several elements for kids to climb, bounce and play on.The new set is much larger than the school s wooden set, and features toys that are geared toward older kids. I want  to try everything, said 8-year-old Matthew Kenney, as he took a short break with his twin brother, John, during the work party.Their grandma Terri Rendahl predicts that the playground will be an instant hit and get plenty of use even when school isn t in session. It s amazing what one little girl s dream turned into, Rendahl said. 
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WASHINGTON Economists have long argued that a rising wealth gap has complicated the U.S. rebound from the Great Recession.Now, an analysis by the rating agency Standard & Poor's lends its weight to the argument: The widening gap between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else has made the economy more prone to boom-bust cycles and slowed the 5-year-old recovery from the recession.Economic disparities appear to be reaching extremes that "need to be watched because they're damaging to growth," said Beth Ann Bovino, chief U.S. economist at S&P.The rising concentration of income among the top 1 percent of earners has contributed to S&P's cutting its growth estimates for the economy. In part because of the disparity, it estimates that <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Sac Louis vuitton</a> the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent annual pace in the next decade, down from a forecast five years ago of a 2.8 percent rate.The S&P report advises against using the tax code to try to narrow the gap. Instead, it suggests that greater access to education would help ease wealth disparities.Part of the problem is that educational achievement has stalled in recent decades. More schooling usually translates into higher wages. S&P estimates that the U.S. economy would grow annually by an additional half a percentage point or $105 billion over the next five years, if the average the American worker had completed just one more year <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Site Officiel</a> of school.By contrast, S&P concludes, heavy taxes that would be meant to reduce inequality could remove incentives for people to work and cause businesses to hire fewer employees because of the costs involved.The report builds on data from the Congressional Budget Office, the International Monetary Fund and academic economists to explain how income disparities can hurt growth. Many consumers tend to become more dependent on debt to continue spending, thereby worsening the boom-bust cycle. Or they curb their spending, and growth improves only modestly, as it has during the current recovery.Tax data tracked as part of the World Top Incomes Database project reveal just how much the economic chasm has expanded.An American in the top 1 percent of earners had an average income of $1.3 million in 2012, the most recent year for which data are available. Average income jumps to $30.8 million for the top 0.01 percent.Adjusted for inflation, the top 0.01 percent's average earnings have jumped by a factor of seven since 1913. For the bottom 90 percent of Americans, average incomes after inflation have grown by a factor <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Homme</a> of just three since 1917 and have declined for the past 13 years.Yet not all economists agree on how much, or even whether, the wealth gap slows growth.Harvard University economist Greg Mankiw wrote in a 2013 paper that "the evidence is that most of the very wealthy get that way by making substantial economic contributions, not by gaming the system."But S&P challenges the notion that a rising tide automatically will lift all boats:"A lifeboat carrying a few, surrounded by many treading water, risks capsizing," it argues.
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Revision as of 11:22, 13 August 2014

@@@ WASHINGTON Economists have long argued that a rising wealth gap has complicated the U.S. rebound from the Great Recession.Now, an analysis by the rating agency Standard & Poor's lends its weight to the argument: The widening gap between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else has made the economy more prone to boom-bust cycles and slowed the 5-year-old recovery from the recession.Economic disparities appear to be reaching extremes that "need to be watched because they're damaging to growth," said Beth Ann Bovino, chief U.S. economist at S&P.The rising concentration of income among the top 1 percent of earners has contributed to S&P's cutting its growth estimates for the economy. In part because of the disparity, it estimates that <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Sac Louis vuitton</a> the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent annual pace in the next decade, down from a forecast five years ago of a 2.8 percent rate.The S&P report advises against using the tax code to try to narrow the gap. Instead, it suggests that greater access to education would help ease wealth disparities.Part of the problem is that educational achievement has stalled in recent decades. More schooling usually translates into higher wages. S&P estimates that the U.S. economy would grow annually by an additional half a percentage point or $105 billion over the next five years, if the average the American worker had completed just one more year <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Site Officiel</a> of school.By contrast, S&P concludes, heavy taxes that would be meant to reduce inequality could remove incentives for people to work and cause businesses to hire fewer employees because of the costs involved.The report builds on data from the Congressional Budget Office, the International Monetary Fund and academic economists to explain how income disparities can hurt growth. Many consumers tend to become more dependent on debt to continue spending, thereby worsening the boom-bust cycle. Or they curb their spending, and growth improves only modestly, as it has during the current recovery.Tax data tracked as part of the World Top Incomes Database project reveal just how much the economic chasm has expanded.An American in the top 1 percent of earners had an average income of $1.3 million in 2012, the most recent year for which data are available. Average income jumps to $30.8 million for the top 0.01 percent.Adjusted for inflation, the top 0.01 percent's average earnings have jumped by a factor of seven since 1913. For the bottom 90 percent of Americans, average incomes after inflation have grown by a factor <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Homme</a> of just three since 1917 and have declined for the past 13 years.Yet not all economists agree on how much, or even whether, the wealth gap slows growth.Harvard University economist Greg Mankiw wrote in a 2013 paper that "the evidence is that most of the very wealthy get that way by making substantial economic contributions, not by gaming the system."But S&P challenges the notion that a rising tide automatically will lift all boats:"A lifeboat carrying a few, surrounded by many treading water, risks capsizing," it argues.

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