Inequality and Globalization
Inequality and Globalization
MAINTAINING MOMENTUM
In the near future, the greatest potential for further reductions in global inequality will
lie in Africa—the region that has arguably benefited the least from the past few decades
of globalization, and the one where global poverty will likely concentrate in the coming
decades as countries such as India leap ahead. Perhaps most important, the population
of Africa is expected to double over the next 35 years, reaching some 25 percent of the
world’s population, and so the extent of global inequality will increasingly depend on the
extent of African growth. Assuming that the economies of sub-Saharan Africa sustain the
modest growth rates they have seen in recent years, then inequality among countries
should keep declining, although not as fast as it did in the first decade of this century.
To maintain the momentum behind declining global inequality, all countries will
need to work harder to reduce inequality within their borders, or at least prevent it from
growing further. In the world’s major economies, failing to do so could cause
disenchanted citizens to misguidedly resist further attempts to integrate the world’s
economies—a process that, if properly managed, can in fact benefit everyone.
In practice, then, states should seek to equalize living standards among their
populations by eliminating all types of ethnic, gender, and social discrimination;
regulating the financial and labor markets; and implementing progressive taxation and
welfare policies. Because the mobility of capital dulls the effectiveness of progressive
taxation policies, governments also need to push for international
measures that
improve the transparency of the financial system, such as those the G-20 and the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development have endorsed to share
information among states in order to clamp down on tax avoidance. Practical steps such
as these should remind policymakers that even though global inequality and domestic
inequality have moved in opposite directions for the past few decades, they need not do
so forever.
(Source: Foreign Affairs, January/February 2016 Issue)