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The Ambiguous Crisis of Global Economic Inequality: Contradictory National and International Trends? WUN Horizons in Human Geography Seminar Series November 11, 2008 Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol
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Inequality: A Classic Concern in the Social Sciences Marxism sociology economics geography?
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Inequality: The Left-Leaning Social Science View pessimistic about reality, optimistic about theory the rich get richer, the poor get poorer even worse: globalisation and neoliberalism a growing/impending crisis of global inequality??
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Growing Inequality: Conservative Responses 1.don’t talk about it 2.deny it’s a problem (esp. if poverty declining) 3.deny it’s occurring 4.attribute inequality to laziness/inferiority of the poor 5.deny the possibility of controlling it 6.deny the advisability of controlling it 7.deny that conservative/neoliberal policies are causing it
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Two Types of Types of Inequality First types: desirable things that can be distributed unevenly health, longevity, education, mobility, political rights, status, wealth, income… Second types: axes of social difference ethnicity, gender, religion, citizenship status…
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Global Income Inequality key decomposition (Firebaugh): within nation inequality one-third of global income inequality between nation inequality two-thirds of global income inequality
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Source: NBER, based on tax data
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Source: Nielson, Alderson, and Beckfield 2005 (from Luxembourg Income Study data)
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Trends in Within-Nation Income Inequality, Mid-1990s to Mid-2000s (Source: OECD 2008) large increase: Canada, Finland, Germany small increase: Austria, Denmark, Japan, Norway, Sweden, USA no change: Australia, Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland small decrease: Greece, Ireland, Netherlands, UK large decrease: Mexico, Turkey
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Trends in Within-Nation Income Inequality, Mid-1980s to Mid-2000s (Source: OECD 2008) large increase: Finland, New Zealand small increase: Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, USA no change: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, Spain, Turkey, UK small decrease: France, Ireland, Spain large decrease: [none]
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Trends in Between-Nation Inequality unweighted by population? growing (definitely) many small, poor countries not growing weighted by population? shrinking (probably, a little) heavily influenced by China and India worldwide rate of absolute poverty declining
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Global Income Inequality between nations, weighted by population: declining (probably, a little) within nations: increasing (definitely, in many but not all) overall: hard to tell, but possibly decreasing
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Causes of Growing Within-Nation Inequality 1.globalisation? 2.skill-biased technological change? 3.conservative/neoliberal/other policies?
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Causes of (Probably) Decreasing Between-Nation Inequality in other words, what’s causing growth in China and India (and some other Asian economies)? globalisation and/or neoliberalism?
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Consequences of Growing Within-Nation Inequality? 1.more nationalism? (Solt 2008) 2.more corruption? (You & Khagram 2005) 3.lost biodiversity? (Mikkelson et al. 2007) 4.worse health? (Wilkinson & Pickett 2006) 5.less political engagement? (Solt 2008) 6.less economic development? (Sokoloff & Engerman; Acemoglu and Robinson; Easterly)
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Consequences of Changing Between- Nation Inequality? ??? what if present trends continue? do effects of global inequality parallel those of within-nation inequality? should we be concerned about weighted or unweighted global inequality? growing influence of international media?
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Final Thoughts inequality is worsening… in some ways probably not a crisis… yet inequality appears to have a number of negative effects, but its full consequences are unclear its causes are also unclear (though we have some ideas) politics matters (even the OECD agrees)
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