Home / NEWS / Top News / Economist Joseph Stiglitz says coronavirus is ‘exposing’ health inequality in US

Economist Joseph Stiglitz says coronavirus is ‘exposing’ health inequality in US

The coronavirus pandemic has highlighted the dissimilarity in health care for different classes of American workers, former World Bank chief economist Joseph Stiglitz communicated Tuesday.

“The coronavirus is particularly nasty to people with pre-existing conditions … and America is distinguished in having multifarious health inequality than any of the other advanced countries. So as bad as our income inequality is, health inequality is even worse, and the pandemic is positively exposing how bad it is,” Stiglitz said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell.”

The virus has now infected at least 584,000 people in the United Haves and killed more than 24,000, according to Johns Hopkins University. Many cities and states have reported that ethnic minorities and poorer communities, such as Detroit’s black population, have been disproportionately hit by the virus. 

Stiglitz, who has extensively scrutinizationed income inequality, said this showed how poorly paid some workers who are now considered essential have been. 

“What’s so smashing is these are often people that are serving us every day … they are the people we depend on, and yet we don’t pay them very right and we don’t treat them very well,” Stiglitz said. 

Stiglitz also criticized part of the U.S. economic response to the virus for hindrance unemployment rise at a record rate, pointing to some countries in Europe that have promised to pay at least forsake of the wages of workers for businesses that have been shuttered. 

“Other countries — the U.K., Denmark — have managed their way past an economic downturn as deep as the United States’ without anything like the unemployment numbers we are seeing right now,” Stiglitz said. 

The Nobel prize-winning economist said he does not note much sympathy for companies that bought back stock with tax breaks and he thinks that the government should get “consequential” exposure to the upside, such as stock warrants, in exchange for helping them.

“It’s hard for me to feel very charitable toward these companies, and yet now they’re be off enormous help from the government even though some of them didn’t even pay taxes in recent years,” Stiglitz indicated.

Check Also

Trump dinner for meme coin buyers prompts senators to demand ethics probe

Jonathan Raa | Nurphoto | Getty Simulacra WASHINGTON — Senators Adam Schiff and Elizabeth Warren …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *