The Wall Street Journal's Justin Lahart has an interesting piece today about how fund managers are starting to worry more about income inequality.

America's rich-and-poor chasm has been a longstanding political issue. Recently, for example, it was the bedrock of Bill de Blasio's progressive (and victorious) mayoral campaign in New York.

But in terms of investors, "even if they have found the widening gulf between America's haves and have-nots troubling, inequality isn't something fund managers have worried about professionally," Lahart reports.

Until now, maybe. From the Wall Street Journal:

Bill Gross, manager of the world's largest bond fund by assets at Pimco, in a recent note said he believed increases in inequality had made the U.S. less productive. "Developed economies work best when inequality of incomes are at a minimum," he wrote. Several fund managers at a Heard on the Street conference last month also voiced concerns, among them Kynikos Associates founder James Chanos, who worried people have less incentive to participate in the economy if they have concluded "the game isn't fair."

When inequality increases as a result of, say, corruption, it clearly causes economic harm. But for the U.S., where much of the increase in inequality results from market mechanisms like changing pay patterns for skilled workers and rising global competition for lower-skilled jobs, its effects are more ambiguous.

Well that's nice. Of course, Lahart is wise to point out the flip-side of this argument. Say companies raised wages or paid higher taxes and their profit margins fell. We might see more income equality, but "it would also leave less money flowing to the bottom line, something that will grab fund managers' attention."

Here's the chart that goes along with the story — Lahart tweeted it out last night. Very compelling.

RT @jdlahart: Here's the chart that goes with my inequality story http://t.co/yKNcMmiRK2 pic.twitter.com/9hZ6TyfAKx — Linette Lopez (@lopezlinette) November 11, 2013





Read the full report at the Wall Street Journal »