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According to Jedediah Purdy, a researcher at the Duke School of Law, the inequality of wealth in the United States has constantly opened the eyes of the many problems and shortcomings of it's financial system over at least the last fifty years of the debate. For years, people believed that distributive justice would produce a sustainable level of wealth inequality. It was also thought that a certain state would be able to effectively diminish the amount of inequality that would occur. Something that was for the most part not expected is the fact that the inequality levels created by the growing markets would lessen the power of that state and prevent the majority of the political community from actually being able to deliver on its plans of distributive justice, however it has just lately come to attention of the mass majority.

Purdy, Jedediah S., Wealth, Inequality, and Democracy (May 13, 2015). Nomos, Wealth Issue, Forthcoming; Duke Law School Public Law & Legal Theory Series No. 2015-38. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2641121