| The world economy slowed in 1973. No one really knows why. Some books focus on the effects in the USA, some focus elsewhere. In the West this has been "The Great Stagnation" whereas in several countries in Asia this has been "The Great Bounce Back" as formerly wealthy civilizations, such as China, recovered some of the ground they lost in the 1800s. Sad to say, I'm not aware of any books that tell the whole international story. For the USA, there have been an abundance of books and articles showing the decline of the middle class: http://billmoyers.com/2015/01/26/middle-class/ Tyler Cowen came up with the phrase Great Stagnation: http://www.amazon.com/Great-Stagnation-America-Low-Hanging-E... Some writers treat this as a political issue: http://www.amazon.com/Boiling-Point-Republicans-Middle-Class... Some writers focus on long-term factors that have little to do with politics. Robert Gordon got good reviews for his historical analysis of the specialness of the 2nd Industrial Revolution 1860-1940, and why the current era is not as robust: http://www.amazon.com/The-Rise-Fall-American-Growth/dp/06911... |
The oil crisis gave the Right a convenient pretext to blame wage increases for inflation.
This became a standard element of economic orthodoxy, and ever since then increases in wages and salaries - which were a driver of post-war prosperity - have been labelled "inflationary', even though inflation is primarily caused by other factors.[1]
By a remarkable and unexpected coincidence, this was the moment when labour share of GDP and middle class prosperity both started to decline. See e.g.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wage_share#/media/File:Adjuste...
[1] The Bank of England always plays on this. About a year ago there was talk of increasing interest rates to "head off inflationary pressure" just in case wages might have started rising in the future. Meanwhile asset inflation in the form of rising property prices is ignored, and more obvious drivers of increasing costs, like consumer energy prices, are downplayed.