Chapter 23 - International Disparities of Wealth
Global income and asset distribution discrepancies are referred to as international wealth disparities.
Activists, scholars, and legislators have all had discussions on this important economics topic.
The degree to which money is distributed unequally within a population is one approach to measure these discrepancies.
The Human Development Index (HDI), which examines a nation's income, education, and health indicators, is one of the additional metrics, along with poverty and wealth inequality.
The World Bank estimates that in 2018, the wealthiest 10% of the world's population had 82% of the overall wealth, while the poorest 50% possessed just 1% of the wealth.
When contrasting established and emerging nations, the differences stand out the most. For instance, in the United States, the richest 1% own more wealth than the combined wealth of the bottom 90%.
In contrast, the average income of developing nations is substantially lower, and many people have difficulty accessing even the most basic essentials.
Globalization is a major factor in these inequalities, since it has benefited certain nations and regions while undermining others.
Although globalisation has made trade and investment easier, it has also resulted in job losses and outsourcing in some sectors, particularly in developing nations. As a result, the divide between wealthy and developing nations has become even wider.
The concentration of power and money in a small number of people and corporations is another cause. Policies that benefit the wealthy, like tax cuts and banking deregulation, have made it possible for this concentration.
Given the close relationship between wealth and power, this has resulted in a situation where a small elite controls an excessive amount of the world's resources.
International differences are also significantly shaped by historical circumstances.
The colonisation and exploitation of numerous emerging nations by European powers delayed their development for decades or even centuries.
This has left a legacy of economic underdevelopment and poverty that is still present today.
Another significant driver in the income gaps is climate change. The effects of climate change, such as droughts, floods, and natural catastrophes, are disproportionately felt in developing countries, which traditionally have lower emissions levels.
Rich nations and businesses continue to generate large amounts of greenhouse gases, which contributes to climate change and widens the gap.
The global economy and society are greatly impacted by the wealth discrepancies. They may trigger social unrest, political instability, or even armed conflict.
Due to the most vulnerable populations' restricted access to resources like healthcare, education, and other services, they can also impede economic growth and development. This may result in a hard-to-break cycle of poverty and underdevelopment.
A thorough and varied strategy is needed to address wealth disparities. This includes measures to redistribute income and power, such as social safety nets, progressive taxation, and laws that forbid monopolies and oligopolies.
Additionally, it necessitates actions to encourage economic growth and lessen poverty in emerging nations, such as spending on infrastructure, education, and healthcare.
Geographic Factors: Several physical factors can affect a country’s economic prosperity, including the soil makeup for farmland, water access for transport and trade, mountains affecting weather and isolation, and availability of animals for food and production.
Navigable Waterways: The benefits of navigable waterways are by no means evenly distributed around the world, whether in terms of the number of rivers and harbors or the suitability of those rivers and harbors for transporting cargoes.
Mountains: Mountains, like waterways, have had both direct economic effects on people’s lives and, indirectly, effects on how those people themselves developed, but, unlike waterways, these direct and indirect effects of mountains have tended to be negative on those living in these mountains.
Location: Location, as such, can affect the fate of whole peoples and nations, even aside from the particular geographic characteristics of a particular location.
Cultures: Cultural differences also account for national wealth disparities, the promotion rule of law and order, atitudes toward work and economic development, idea sharing between diverse backgrounds, and the utilization of human capital.
Cultural Isolation: One of the aspects of a culture that can be very important in its economic consequences is a willingness, or unwillingness, to learn from other cultures.
Population: Population density does not seem to affect prosperity. Rather, it’s improved through the productivity of people, which depends on their habits, skills, and experience.
Migration: Humans have migrated throughout time, dispersing technology causing significant advancements, and adopting cultures changing people’s mindsets.
Imperialism: Conquests have exchanged wealth, culture, and people; however, there is little “evidence that current economic disparities between nations in income and wealth can be explained by a history of imperial exploitation.”
Implications: Trying to assign relative weights to the various factors behind economic differences would be an ambitious and hazardous undertaking.
Global income and asset distribution discrepancies are referred to as international wealth disparities.
Activists, scholars, and legislators have all had discussions on this important economics topic.
The degree to which money is distributed unequally within a population is one approach to measure these discrepancies.
The Human Development Index (HDI), which examines a nation's income, education, and health indicators, is one of the additional metrics, along with poverty and wealth inequality.
The World Bank estimates that in 2018, the wealthiest 10% of the world's population had 82% of the overall wealth, while the poorest 50% possessed just 1% of the wealth.
When contrasting established and emerging nations, the differences stand out the most. For instance, in the United States, the richest 1% own more wealth than the combined wealth of the bottom 90%.
In contrast, the average income of developing nations is substantially lower, and many people have difficulty accessing even the most basic essentials.
Globalization is a major factor in these inequalities, since it has benefited certain nations and regions while undermining others.
Although globalisation has made trade and investment easier, it has also resulted in job losses and outsourcing in some sectors, particularly in developing nations. As a result, the divide between wealthy and developing nations has become even wider.
The concentration of power and money in a small number of people and corporations is another cause. Policies that benefit the wealthy, like tax cuts and banking deregulation, have made it possible for this concentration.
Given the close relationship between wealth and power, this has resulted in a situation where a small elite controls an excessive amount of the world's resources.
International differences are also significantly shaped by historical circumstances.
The colonisation and exploitation of numerous emerging nations by European powers delayed their development for decades or even centuries.
This has left a legacy of economic underdevelopment and poverty that is still present today.
Another significant driver in the income gaps is climate change. The effects of climate change, such as droughts, floods, and natural catastrophes, are disproportionately felt in developing countries, which traditionally have lower emissions levels.
Rich nations and businesses continue to generate large amounts of greenhouse gases, which contributes to climate change and widens the gap.
The global economy and society are greatly impacted by the wealth discrepancies. They may trigger social unrest, political instability, or even armed conflict.
Due to the most vulnerable populations' restricted access to resources like healthcare, education, and other services, they can also impede economic growth and development. This may result in a hard-to-break cycle of poverty and underdevelopment.
A thorough and varied strategy is needed to address wealth disparities. This includes measures to redistribute income and power, such as social safety nets, progressive taxation, and laws that forbid monopolies and oligopolies.
Additionally, it necessitates actions to encourage economic growth and lessen poverty in emerging nations, such as spending on infrastructure, education, and healthcare.
Geographic Factors: Several physical factors can affect a country’s economic prosperity, including the soil makeup for farmland, water access for transport and trade, mountains affecting weather and isolation, and availability of animals for food and production.
Navigable Waterways: The benefits of navigable waterways are by no means evenly distributed around the world, whether in terms of the number of rivers and harbors or the suitability of those rivers and harbors for transporting cargoes.
Mountains: Mountains, like waterways, have had both direct economic effects on people’s lives and, indirectly, effects on how those people themselves developed, but, unlike waterways, these direct and indirect effects of mountains have tended to be negative on those living in these mountains.
Location: Location, as such, can affect the fate of whole peoples and nations, even aside from the particular geographic characteristics of a particular location.
Cultures: Cultural differences also account for national wealth disparities, the promotion rule of law and order, atitudes toward work and economic development, idea sharing between diverse backgrounds, and the utilization of human capital.
Cultural Isolation: One of the aspects of a culture that can be very important in its economic consequences is a willingness, or unwillingness, to learn from other cultures.
Population: Population density does not seem to affect prosperity. Rather, it’s improved through the productivity of people, which depends on their habits, skills, and experience.
Migration: Humans have migrated throughout time, dispersing technology causing significant advancements, and adopting cultures changing people’s mindsets.
Imperialism: Conquests have exchanged wealth, culture, and people; however, there is little “evidence that current economic disparities between nations in income and wealth can be explained by a history of imperial exploitation.”
Implications: Trying to assign relative weights to the various factors behind economic differences would be an ambitious and hazardous undertaking.