Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has a point about the 'trifecta of inequality': El-Erian

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Democratic Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is right about the negative effects of inequality but wrong when she says a society with billionaires is an immoral one, said Allianz’s chief economic adviser, Mohamed El-Erian.

“If you create Facebook in your dorm, of course, you should be a billionaire,” El-Erian said, adding that wealth inequality is “a good thing — you incentivize.”

But El-Erian said he agrees with New York’s Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez about how the gap between rich and poor unfairly narrows economic opportunity for many Americans.

“We're going to risk a major alienation and marginalization of part of our country, which is a real problem,” he said.

El-Erian made the comments to Editor-in-Chief Andy Serwer in a conversation that aired on Yahoo Finance in an episode of “Influencers with Andy Serwer,” a weekly interview series with leaders in business, politics, and entertainment.

During his tenure as CEO, El-Erian helped PIMCO grow its assets under management to as high as $2 trillion. At the same time, he led a team of advisers who instructed President Barack Obama on global development. Before that, he took charge of the billions in Harvard University’s endowment and worked as deputy director at the International Monetary Fund.

Since 2014, El-Erian has served as the chief economic adviser at Allianz, the parent company of PIMCO.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., left, looks over her notes during testimony by Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former lawyer, before the House Oversight and Reform Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2019. Sitting next to Ocasio-Cortez is Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., right. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

‘Trifecta of inequality’

“This country can actually tolerate an inequality of income and wealth,” El-Erian said. “When it becomes a trifecta of income, wealth, and opportunity, that's a real problem.”

That “trifecta of inequality” took hold after the Great Recession in 2008, El-Erian said. He urged the country to put forward an infrastructure overhaul and redistributive fiscal policies to reverse the trend.

We need “growth that really brings in more segments of society,” he said.

In a $4.7 trillion budget proposal submitted to Congress on Monday, Trump requested $200 billion in infrastructure spending as part of an effort to leverage a total of $1 trillion in public-private investment. Democrats have criticized this approach to infrastructure spending, demanding greater government spending and tax changes to fund it.

In January, at an event celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Ocasio-Cortez said it’s “wrong” that billionaires can live in a country alongside “parts of Alabama where people are still getting ringworm because they don’t have access to public health.”

She has proposed a marginal tax rate of 70% on income over $10 million—a proposal that 45% of voters support and 32% of voters oppose, according to a Morning Consult poll that surveyed 1,993 voters last month.

A proposed 2% wealth tax on households that exceed $50 million, put forward by Massachusetts Senator and presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren, outperformed the Ocasio-Cortez proposal in the same poll. Sixty-one percent of voters favored the Warren proposal, including 50% of Republicans.

Andy Serwer is editor-in-chief of Yahoo Finance.

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