"Beyond all this, there’s the challenge of reconciling these income data with other things we’ve been hearing about economic trends. For example, I recently read somewhere that Americans are three times richer than they were a few decades ago […] a quick web search indeed shows something like a doubling of inflation-adjusted GDP since 1970."<p>I’m no statistician, but I do know that GDP is at best only loosely correlated with “wealth,” and it sure as heck doesn’t say anything about where that wealth — or even the activity that it actually is a measure of — is increasing.
The amazing thing is that the "big bulge" that Evans referred to in the original graph is clearly the bulge on the left (low-income) side of the graph, while McArdle incorrectly focuses on the artifact on the right (high-income) side -- and then none of the follow-on posts seem to point this mistake out.