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China's got a long way to go before the US could be "behind".
Wage and price regulations, environmental regulations, and general wealth, have destroyed the Rust Belt. If factory workers elsewhere are making $15/day and yours are making $15/hr, and shipping is cheap, you can't compete at factory work. Blocking that off with tariffs makes everyone (possibly excepting the factory workers who would have lost their jobs) poorer.
You can't separate industrial policy from the rest of the economy. Would you rather have had the 1970s forever?
But low Gini coefficients usually make places nicer to live in them. So it also should be included in the calculation. As an IT - my experience has shown me so far that optimizing for a single variable is rarely the wisest thing to do.
I don't believe that.
I think it's the other way around. High Gini index countries are all shitholes (or city states with distorted demographics), but low Gini index countries can be the best first world countries, regular second world countries or countries destroyed by a war.
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