Wealth and Poverty


Wealth and Poverty is a best-selling 1981 non-fiction book by investor and author George Gilder.

Overview

After completing Visible Man in the late 1970s Gilder began writing "The Pursuit of Poverty." In early 1981 Basic Books published the result as Wealth and Poverty. The book was an analysis of the roots of economic growth. Reviewing it within a month of the inauguration of the Reagan administration the New York Times reviewer called it "A Guide to Capitalism" and wrote that it offered "a creed for capitalism worthy of intelligent people." The book was a New York Times bestseller and eventually sold over a million copies.
In Wealth and Poverty, Gilder extended the sociological and anthropological analysis of his early books in which he had advocated for the socialization of men into service to women through work and marriage. He wove those sociological themes into the economic policy prescriptions of supply-side economics. The breakup of the nuclear family and demand-side economics led to poverty. Family and supply-side policies led to wealth.
In reviewing the problems of the immediate past and proposing his supply-side solutions, Gilder did argued not only the practical but also the moral superiority of supply-side capitalism over the alternatives. "Capitalism begins with giving," he asserted, but New Deal liberalism created moral hazard. It was work, family, and faith that created wealth out of poverty: "It is this supply-side moral vision that underlies all the economic arguments of Wealth and Poverty."
In 1994, Gilder asserted that America has no poverty problem, the real problem is the "moral decay" of the "so-called poor," and their real need is "Christian teaching from the churches." He called the poor in America "the so-called poor," who have been "ruined by the overflow of American prosperity," and he asserted that they have more purchasing power than the middle class in Japan in the 1990s:
Wealth and Poverty'' advanced a practical and moral case for supply-side economics and capitalism during the early months of the Reagan administration.