Economists agree: You're not crazy for feeling like the rich get richer, and the poor are doing worse. Welcome to the 'K
shaped economy
It all began with an anonymous Twitter handle named Ivan the K. The self-appointed Lead Independent Director of Finance Twitter had a dark theory in the depths of the pandemic. In 2020, they asked the universe, Why is no one talking about a K recovery? since there was much discussion at that time about an economic bounceback in the shape of either a U, an L, or, most bullish of all, a V. Some things will bounce back, Ivan wrote, some will not recover. Think about it.
Economists seem to have thunk on it and agreed: The K is real. It bears similarities to another saying, invented nearly 200 years earlier by the great English romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley: The rich get richer, the poor get poorer.
This is also called the Matthew effect, as some trace the sentiment all the way back to the bibles Book of Matthew 25:29: For to everyone who has, more will be given, and he will have abundance; but from the one who does not have, even what he has will be taken away.
If you ask Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moodys Analytics, this old-time religion got a new lease on life in the Reaganomics of the 1980s. You really start to see this in the Reagan era, Zandi told Fortune. Thats when you get a structural divergence between productivity growth and median wage growth.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/economists-agree-not-crazy-feeling-140000181.html