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Economic inequality

There are wide varieties of economic inequality, most notably income inequality measured using the distribution of income (the amount of money people are paid) and wealth inequality measured using the distribution of wealth (the amount of wealth people own). Besides economic inequality between countries or states, there are important types of economic inequality between different groups of people.[2]

Differences in national income equality around the world as measured by the national Gini coefficient as of 2018.[1] The Gini coefficient is a number between 0 and 100, where 0 corresponds with perfect equality (where everyone has the same income) and 100 corresponds with absolute inequality (where one person has all the income, and everyone else has zero income).
Global share of wealth by wealth group, Credit Suisse, 2021
Wealth disparity in major cities
Tents of the homeless on the sidewalk in Skid Row, Los Angeles
An affluent house in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, roughly 12 miles from downtown (above)

Important types of economic measurements focus on wealth, income, and consumption. There are many methods for measuring economic inequality,[3] the Gini coefficient being a widely used one. Another type of measure is the Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index, which is a statistic composite index that takes inequality into account.[4] Important concepts of equality include equity, equality of outcome, and equality of opportunity.

Whereas globalization has reduced global inequality (between nations), it has increased inequality within nations.[5][6][7][8] Income inequality between nations peaked in the 1970s, when world income was distributed bimodally into "rich" and "poor" countries. Since then, income levels across countries have been converging, with most people now living in middle-income countries.[5][9] However, inequality within most nations has risen significantly in the last 30 years, particularly among advanced countries.[5][6][7][8] In this period, close to 90 percent of advanced economies have seen an increase in income inequality, with over 70% recording an increase in their Gini coefficients exceeding two points.[5]

Research has generally linked economic inequality to political and social instability, including revolution, democratic breakdown and civil conflict.[5][10][11][12] Research suggests that greater inequality hinders economic growth and macroeconomic stability, and that land and human capital inequality reduce growth more than inequality of income.[5][13] Inequality is at the center stage of economic policy debate across the globe, as government tax and spending policies have significant effects on income distribution.[5] In advanced economies, taxes and transfers decrease income inequality by one-third, with most of this being achieved via public social spending (such as pensions and family benefits).[5]

Measurements

 
Share of income of the top 1% for selected developed countries, 1975 to 2015

In 1820, the ratio between the income of the top and bottom 20 percent of the world's population was three to one. By 1991, it was eighty-six to one.[14] A 2011 study titled "Divided we Stand: Why Inequality Keeps Rising" by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) sought to explain the causes for this rising inequality by investigating economic inequality in OECD countries; it concluded that the following factors played a role:[15]

  • Changes in the structure of households can play an important role. Single-headed households in OECD countries have risen from an average of 15% in the late 1980s to 20% in the mid-2000s, resulting in higher inequality.
  • Assortative mating refers to the phenomenon of people marrying people with similar background, for example doctors marrying other doctors rather than nurses. OECD found out that 40% of couples where both partners work belonged to the same or neighbouring earnings deciles compared with 33% some 20 years before.[16]
  • In the bottom percentiles, number of hours worked has decreased.[16]
  • The main reason for increasing inequality seems to be the difference between the demand for and supply of skills.[16]

The study made the following conclusions about the level of economic inequality:

  • Income inequality in OECD countries is at its highest level for the past half century. The ratio between the bottom 10% and the top 10% has increased from 1:7 to 1:9 in 25 years.[16]
  • There are tentative signs of a possible convergence of inequality levels towards a common and higher average level across OECD countries.[16]
  • With very few exceptions (France, Japan, and Spain), the wages of the 10% best-paid workers have risen relative to those of the 10% lowest paid.[16]

A 2011 OECD study investigated economic inequality in Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Russia, and South Africa. It concluded that key sources of inequality in these countries include "a large, persistent informal sector, widespread regional divides (e.g. urban-rural), gaps in access to education, and barriers to employment and career progression for women."[16]

 
Countries by total wealth (trillions USD), Credit Suisse
 
World map of countries by the inequality-adjusted Human Development Index.

A study by the World Institute for Development Economics Research at United Nations University reported that the richest 1% of adults alone owned 40% of global assets in the year 2000. The three richest people in the world possess more financial assets than the lowest 48 nations combined.[17] The combined wealth of the "10 million dollar millionaires" grew to nearly $41 trillion in 2008.[18]

Oxfam's 2021 report on global inequality said that the COVID-19 pandemic has increased economic inequality substantially; the wealthiest people across the globe were impacted the least by the pandemic and their fortunes recovered quickest, with billionaires seeing their wealth increase by $3.9 trillion, while at the same time the number of people living on less than $5.50 a day likely increased by 500 million.[19] The 2022 Oxfam report said that growing economic inequality has been a factor in increased mortality rates during the pandemic, contributing to the deaths of 21,000 people on a daily basis, while the wealth of the world's 10 richest billionaires doubled.[20][21] The 2023 report stated that roughly two thirds of all new wealth went to the top 1% at the same time that extreme poverty has been increasing globally.[22] According to economist Joseph Stiglitz, the pandemic's "most significant outcome" will be rising economic inequality in the United States and between the developed and developing world.[23]

 
Wealth inequality in the United States increased from 1989 to 2013.[24]

According to PolitiFact, the top 400 richest Americans "have more wealth than half of all Americans combined."[25][26][27][28] According to The New York Times on July 22, 2014, the "richest 1 percent in the United States now own more wealth than the bottom 90 percent".[29] Inherited wealth may help explain why many Americans who have become rich may have had a "substantial head start".[30][31] A 2017 report by the IPS said that three individuals, Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, own as much wealth as the bottom half of the population, or 160 million people, and that the growing disparity between the wealthy and the poor has created a "moral crisis", noting that "we have not witnessed such extreme levels of concentrated wealth and power since the first gilded age a century ago."[32][33] In 2016, the world's billionaires increased their combined global wealth to a record $6 trillion.[34] In 2017, they increased their collective wealth to 8.9 trillion.[35] In 2018, U.S. income inequality reached the highest level ever recorded by the Census Bureau.[36]

The existing data and estimates suggest a large increase in international (and more generally inter-macroregional) components between 1820 and 1960. It might have slightly decreased since that time at the expense of increasing inequality within countries.[37] The United Nations Development Programme in 2014 asserted that greater investments in social security, jobs, and laws that protect vulnerable populations are necessary to prevent widening income inequality.[38]

There is a significant difference in the measured wealth distribution and the public's understanding of wealth distribution. Michael Norton of the Harvard Business School and Dan Ariely of the Department of Psychology at Duke University found this to be true in their research conducted in 2011. The actual wealth going to the top quintile in 2011 was around 84%, whereas the average amount of wealth that the general public estimated to go to the top quintile was around 58%.[39]

According to a 2020 study, global earnings inequality has decreased substantially since 1970. During the 2000s and 2010s, the share of earnings by the world's poorest half doubled.[40] Two researchers claim that global income inequality is decreasing due to strong economic growth in developing countries.[41] According to a January 2020 report by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, economic inequality between states had declined, but intrastate inequality has increased for 70% of the world population over the period 1990–2015.[42] In 2015, the OECD reported in 2015 that income inequality is higher than it has ever been within OECD member nations and is at increased levels in many emerging economies.[43] According to a June 2015 report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF):

Widening income inequality is the defining challenge of our time. In advanced economies, the gap between the rich and poor is at its highest level in decades. Inequality trends have been more mixed in emerging markets and developing countries (EMDCs), with some countries experiencing declining inequality, but pervasive inequities in access to education, health care, and finance remain.[44]

In October 2017, the IMF warned that inequality within nations, in spite of global inequality falling in recent decades, has risen so sharply that it threatens economic growth and could result in further political polarization. The Fund's Fiscal Monitor report said that "progressive taxation and transfers are key components of efficient fiscal redistribution."[45] In October 2018 Oxfam published a Reducing Inequality Index which measured social spending, tax and workers' rights to show which countries were best at closing the gap between the rich and the poor.[46]

The 2022 World Inequality Report, a four-year research project organized by the economists Lucas Chancel, Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Gabriel Zucman, shows that "the world is marked by a very high level of income inequality and an extreme level of wealth inequality" and that these inequalities "seem to be about as great today as they were at the peak of western imperialism in the early 20th century." According to the report, the bottom half of the population owns 2% of global wealth, while the top 10% owns 76% of it. The top 1% owns 38%.[47][48][49]

Wealth distribution within individual countries

The following table shows information about individual wealth distribution in different countries from a 2018 report by Crédit Suisse.[50] The wealth is calculated by various factors, for instance: liabilities, debts, exchange rates and their expected development, real estate prices, human resources, natural resources and technical advancements, etc.






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Median and mean wealth per adult, in US dollars. Countries and subnational areas.
Initially in rank order by median wealth.
Country or
subnational area
Median wealth
per adult.
US dollars
Mean wealth
per adult.
US dollars
Ratio (%)
of median
to mean
Adults.
thousands
  Iceland 203,847 555,726 36.9 248
  Australia 191,453 411,060 46.6 18,433
  Switzerland 183,339 530,244 34.6 6,811
  Luxembourg 164,284 412,127 39.9 456
  Belgium 163,429 313,045 52.2 8,869
  Netherlands 114,935 253,205 45.4 13,260
  France 106,827 280,580 38.1 49,478
  Canada 106,342 288,263 36.9 28,858
  Japan 103,861 227,235 45.7 105,108
  New Zealand 98,613 289,798 34.0 3,486
  United Kingdom 97,169 279,048 34.8 50,919
  Singapore 91,656 283,118 32.4 4,552
  Spain 87,188 191,177 45.6 37,410
  Norway 80,054 291,103 27.5 4,057
  Italy 79,239 217,787 36.4 48,527
  Taiwan 78,177 212,375 36.8 19,139
  Malta 76,116 140,629 54.1 347
  Ireland 72,473 232,952 31.1 3,460
  Austria 70,074 231,368 30.3 7,075
  South Korea 65,463 171,739 38.1 41,381
  United States 61,667 403,974 15.3 242,972
  Denmark 60,999 286,712 21.3 4,450
  Qatar 59,978 121,638 49.3 2,177
  Hong Kong 58,905 244,672 24.1 6,224
  Israel 54,966 174,129 31.6 5,405
  Finland 45,606 161,062 28.3 4,327
  Greece 40,789 108,127 37.7 9,019
  Sweden 39,709 249,765 15.9 7,689
  Germany 35,169 214,893 16.4 67,470
  Slovenia 34,043 79,097 43.0 1,676
  Portugal 31,313 109,362 28.6 8,377
  Libya 26,939 61,701 43.7 4,085
  Kuwait 26,278 91,374 28.8 3,045
  United Arab Emirates 25,267 88,173 28.7 7,752
  Chile 23,812 62,222 38.3 13,166
  Seychelles 21,349 48,652 43.9 68
  Slovakia 21,203 34,781 61.0 4,339
  Estonia 18,895 57,806 32.7 1,034
  Croatia 17,131 35,951 47.7 3,342
  Czech Republic 17,018 61,489 27.7 8,529
  Mauritius 16,472 35,668 46.2 943
  China 16,333 47,810 34.2 1,085,003
  Hungary 15,026 37,594 40.0 7,826
  Aruba 14,901 45,612 32.7 79
  Oman 14,304 41,804 34.2 3,450
  Brunei 14,154 42,925 33.0 298
  Bahrain 13,385 38,882 34.4 1,153
  Saudi Arabia 12,847 43,174 29.8 22,629
  Uruguay 12,556 39,194 32.0 2,484
  Montenegro 12,060 24,746 48.7 475
  Bahamas 11,385 47,822 23.8 288
  Lithuania 11,161 24,600 45.4 2,306
  Bulgaria 11,013 23,984 45.9 5,752
  Poland 10,572 31,794 33.3 30,626
  Cyprus 10,384 100,308 10.4 909
  Costa Rica 9,813 31,717 30.9 3,490
  Barbados 8,522 28,762 29.6 213
  Panama 8,358 28,897 28.9 2,655
  Albania 8,157 16,957 48.1 2,201
  Latvia 7,540 33,958 22.2 1,557
  Georgia 7,078 16,725 42.3 2,940
  Malaysia 7,000 27,970 25.0 21,372
  Gabon 6,973 16,342 42.7 1,124
  Tonga 6,796 15,255 44.6 58
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 6,762 14,110 47.9 2,805
  South Africa 6,726 22,191 30.3 35,434
  Romania 6,658 20,321 32.8 15,582
  Samoa 6,516 18,154 35.9 105
  Iraq 6,515 14,192 45.9 19,160
  Tunisia 6,226 14,932 41.7 8,014
  Peru 6,036 22,508 26.8 20,766
  Mexico 5,784 20,620 28.1 83,850
  Jordan 5,745 13,328 43.1 5,371
  North Macedonia 5,640 12,551 44.9 1,612
  Dominica 5,548 23,937 23.2 54
  Trinidad and Tobago 5,076 15,719 32.3 1,002
  Colombia 4,937 18,239 27.1 33,751
  Serbia 4,903 10,743 45.6 6,809
  Turkmenistan 4,824 10,446 46.2 3,548
  Antigua and Barbuda 4,712 19,497 24.2 70
  El Salvador 4,616 15,219 30.3 4,024
  Mongolia 4,616 10,295 44.8 1,960
  Brazil 24,263 31,724 32.6 145,836
  Namibia 3,944 11,704 33.7 1,356
  Lebanon 3,932 33,726 11.7 4,162
  Solomon Islands 3,835 9,035 42.5 312
  Grenada 3,704 16,081 23.0 71
  Botswana 3,652 10,793 33.8 1,375
  Saint Lucia 3,525 11,146 31.6 131
  Azerbaijan 3,410 7,530 45.3 6,915
  Armenia 3,391 7,583 44.7 2,175
  Fiji 3,254 8,031 40.5 574
  Ecuador 3,211 11,068 29.0 10,507
  Argentina 3,176 11,530 27.6 29,953
  Algeria 3,175 9,077 35.0 26,565
  Angola 3,175 7,921 40.1 12,934
  Equatorial Guinea 3,057 9,398 32.5 695
  Honduras 2,887 10,675 27.0 5,417
  Russia 2,739 19,997 13.7 112,039
  Maldives 2,702 6,808 39.7 308
  Turkey 2,677 18,555 14.4 54,411
  Paraguay 2,589 9,075 28.5 4,181
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 2,547 10,882 23.4 75
  Jamaica 2,507 8,924 28.1 1,983
  Morocco 2,426 9,305 26.1 23,218
  Sri Lanka 2,415 5,758 41.9 14,311
  Vanuatu 2,346 5,355 43.8 152
  Belize 2,298 8,961 25.6 221
  Djibouti 2,123 5,389 39.4 569
  Papua New Guinea 2,117 6,254 33.9 4,488
  Bolivia 2,111 7,306 28.9 6,530
  Philippines 1,915 8,349 22.9 62,043
  Iran 1,899 4,779 39.7 57,018
  Vietnam 1,806 4,560 39.6 67,300
  Kyrgyzstan 1,797 4,200 42.8 3,668
  Pakistan 1,711 3,816 44.8 110,625
  Indonesia 1,597 8,919 17.9 170,221
  Laos 1,567 5,215 30.1 3,946
  Eritrea 1,499 3,412 43.9 2,462
  Guyana 1,454 4,620 31.5 475
  Eswatini 1,388 4,219 32.9 719
  Cambodia 1,365 3,404 40.1 9,598
  Zimbabwe 1,317 3,216 41.0 8,103
  São Tomé and Príncipe 1,311 2,987 43.9 96
  East Timor 1,303 2,513 51.9 584
  India 1,289 7,024 18.4 850,210
  Senegal 1,270 3,077 41.3 7,525
  Benin 1,237 2,972 41.6 5,300
  Republic of the Congo 1,219 3,361 36.3 2,546
  Suriname 1,147 5,198 22.1 368
  Ivory Coast 1,119 2,958 37.8 11,501
  Thailand 1,085 9,969 10.9 52,639
  Nicaragua 1,054 3,721 28.3 3,858
  Bangladesh 1,006 2,332 43.1 102,793
  Comoros 971 2,729 35.6 412
  Togo 917 2,324 39.5 3,800
  Cameroon 897 2,282 39.3 11,413
  Kenya 880 2,306 38.2 24,546
  Lesotho 857 2,640 32.5 1,208
    Nepal 834 2,054 40.6 17,150
  Mauritania 764 1,756 43.5 2,239
  Belarus 740 1,514 48.9 7,427
  Myanmar 739 1,515 48.8 34,334
  Haiti 619 2,472 25.0 6,300
  Tajikistan 618 1,364 45.3 4,995
  Yemen 594 1,967 30.2 14,122
  Burkina Faso 569 1,317 43.2 8,571
  Syria 500 1,190 42.0 9,477
  Mali 468 1,094 42.8 7,834
  Liberia 410 1,015 40.4 2,279
  Ghana 398 934 42.6 14,972
  Zambia 390 1,197 32.6 7,641
  Tanzania 383 865 44.3 25,944
  Niger 379 863 43.9 8,579
  Egypt 346 3,717 9.3 57,160
  Central African Republic 332 960 34.6 2,132
  Gambia 327 889 36.8 936
  Guinea 323 816 39.6 6,077
  Guinea-Bissau 296 701 42.2 909
  Chad 294 735 40.0 6,319
  Afghanistan 290 643 45.1 16,245
  Uganda 287 710 40.4 17,941
  Rwanda 254 660 38.5 6,123
  Sudan 231 530 43.6 19,846
  Nigeria 208 1,572 13.2 88,264
  Mozambique 201 482 41.7 13,360
  Madagascar 179 432 41.4 12,471
  Sierra Leone 153 355 43.1 3,596
  Kazakhstan 1,520 5,122 29.7 12,086
  Burundi 142 321 44.2 4,972
  DR Congo 123 331 37.2 35,869
  Ethiopia 78 167 46.7 51,036
  Malawi 54 141 38.3 8,493
  Ukraine 430 3,964 10.9 35,267

Income distribution within individual countries

 
Countries' income inequality according to their most recent reported Gini index values as of 2018.[1]

Income inequality is measured by Gini coefficient (expressed in percent %) that is a number between 0 and 1. Here 0 expresses perfect equality, meaning that everyone has the same income, whereas 1 represents perfect inequality, meaning that one person has all the income and others have none. A Gini index value above 50% is considered high; countries including Brazil, Colombia, South Africa, Botswana, and Honduras can be found in this category. A Gini index value of 30% or above is considered medium; countries including Vietnam, Mexico, Poland, the United States, Argentina, Russia and Uruguay can be found in this category. A Gini index value lower than 30% is considered low; countries including Austria, Germany, Denmark, Norway, Slovenia, Sweden, and Ukraine can be found in this category.[51] In the low income inequality category (below 30%) is a wide representation of countries previously being part of Soviet Union or its satellites, like Slovakia, Czech Republic, Ukraine and Hungary.

In 2012 the Gini index for income inequality for whole European Union was only 30.6%.

Income distribution can differ from wealth distribution within each country. The wealth inequality is also measured in Gini index. There the higher Gini index signify greater inequality within the wealth distribution in country, 0 means total wealth equality and 1 represents situation, where everyone has no wealth, except an individual that has everything.  For instance countries like Denmark, Norway and Netherlands, all belonging to the last category (below 30%, low income inequality) also have very high Gini index in wealth distribution, ranging from 70% up to 90%.

Consumption distribution within individual countries

In economics, the consumption distribution or consumption inequality is an alternative to the income distribution or wealth distribution for judging economic inequality, comparing levels of consumption rather than income or wealth.[52] This is an important measure of inequality as the basic utility of the wealth or income is the expenditure.[53] People experience the inequality directly in consumption, rather than income or wealth.[54]

Factors proposed to affect economic inequality

There are various reasons for economic inequality within societies, including both global market functions (such as trade, development, and regulation) as well as social factors (including gender, race, and education).[55] Recent growth in overall income inequality, at least within the OECD countries, has been driven mostly by increasing inequality in wages and salaries.[15]

Economist Thomas Piketty argues that widening economic disparity is an inevitable phenomenon of free market capitalism when the rate of return of capital (r) is greater than the rate of growth of the economy (g).[56]

Labour market

In modern market economies, if competition is imperfect; information unevenly distributed; opportunities to acquire education and skills unequal; market failure results. Many such imperfect conditions exist in virtually every market. According to Joseph Stiglitz this means that there is an enormous potential role for government to correct such market failures.[57]

In the United States, real wages are flat over the past 40 years for occupations across income and education levels, e.g. auto mechanics, cashiers, doctors, and software engineers.[58] However, stock ownership favors higher income and education levels,[59] thereby resulting in disparate investment income.

Taxes

Another cause is the rate at which income is taxed coupled with the progressivity of the tax system. A progressive tax is a tax by which the tax rate increases as the taxable base amount increases.[60][61][62][63][64] In a progressive tax system, the level of the top tax rate will often have a direct impact on the level of inequality within a society, either increasing it or decreasing it, provided that income does not change as a result of the change in tax regime. Additionally, steeper tax progressivity applied to social spending can result in a more equal distribution of income across the board.[65] Tax credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit in the US can also decrease income inequality.[66] The difference between the Gini index for an income distribution before taxation and the Gini index after taxation is an indicator for the effects of such taxation.[67]

Education

 
Illustration from a 1916 advertisement for a vocational school in the back of a US magazine. Education has been seen as a key to higher income, and this advertisement appealed to Americans' belief in the possibility of self-betterment, as well as threatening the consequences of downward mobility in the great income inequality existing during the Industrial Revolution.

An important factor in the creation of inequality is variation in individuals' access to education.[68] Education, especially in an area where there is a high demand for workers, creates high wages for those with this education.[69] However, increases in education first increase and then decrease growth as well as income inequality. As a result, those who are unable to afford an education, or choose not to pursue optional education, generally receive much lower wages. The justification for this is that a lack of education leads directly to lower incomes, and thus lower aggregate saving and investment. Conversely, quality education raises incomes and promotes growth because it helps to unleash the productive potential of the poor.[70]

Access to education was in turn influenced by land inequalities. In the less industrialized parts of 19th century Europe, for example, landowners still held more political power than industrialists. These landowners did not benefit from educating their workers as much as industrialists did, since "educated workers have more incentives to migrate to urban, industrial areas than their less educated counterparts."[71] Consequently, lower incentives to promote education in regions where land inequality was high led to lower levels of numeracy in these regions.[71]

Economic liberalism, deregulation and decline of unions

John Schmitt and Ben Zipperer (2006) of the CEPR point to economic liberalism and the reduction of business regulation along with the decline of union membership as one of the causes of economic inequality. In an analysis of the effects of intensive Anglo-American liberal policies in comparison to continental European liberalism, where unions have remained strong, they concluded "The U.S. economic and social model is associated with substantial levels of social exclusion, including high levels of income inequality, high relative and absolute poverty rates, poor and unequal educational outcomes, poor health outcomes, and high rates of crime and incarceration. At the same time, the available evidence provides little support for the view that U.S.-style labor market flexibility dramatically improves labor-market outcomes. Despite popular prejudices to the contrary, the U.S. economy consistently affords a lower level of economic mobility than all the continental European countries for which data is available."[72]

More recently, the International Monetary Fund has published studies which found that the decline of unionization in many advanced economies and the establishment of neoliberal economics have fueled rising income inequality.[73][74]

Information technology

The growth in importance of information technology has been credited with increasing income inequality.[75] Technology has been called "the main driver of the recent increases in inequality" by Erik Brynjolfsson, of MIT.[76] In arguing against this explanation, Jonathan Rothwell notes that if technological advancement is measured by high rates of invention, there is a negative correlation between it and inequality. Countries with high invention rates — "as measured by patent applications filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty" — exhibit lower inequality than those with less. In one country, the United States, "salaries of engineers and software developers rarely reach" above $390,000/year (the lower limit for the top 1% earners).[77]

Some researchers, such as Juliet B. Schor, highlight the role of for-profit online sharing economy platforms as an accelerator of income inequality and calls into question their supposed contribution in empowering outsiders of the labour market.[78]

Taking the example of TaskRabbit, a labour service platform, she shows that a large proportion of providers already have a stable full-time job and participate part-time in the platform as an opportunity to increase their income by diversifying their activities outside employment, which tends to restrict the volume of work remaining for the minority of platform workers.

In addition, there is an important phenomenon of labour substitution as manual tasks traditionally performed by workers without a degree (or just a college degree) integrated into the labour market in the traditional economy sectors are now performed by workers with a high level of education (in 2013, 70% of TaskRabbit's workforce held a bachelor's degree, 20% a master's degree and 5% a PhD).[79] The development of platforms, which are increasingly capturing demand for these manual services at the expense of non-platform companies, may therefore benefit mainly skilled workers who are offered more earning opportunities that can be used as supplemental or transitional work during periods of unemployment.

It has also been proposed that information technologies contribute to "winner take most" market concentration, reducing the need for labor across competing suppliers.[80] Market concentration drives down labor's share of the GDP, increasing the wealth of capital and thereby exacerbating inequality.

Economists have linked automation to increases in economic inequality, as automation raises the returns to wealth and contributes to stagnating wages at the lower end of the wage distribution.[81]

Globalization

 
"Elephant curve": Change in real income between 1988 and 2008 at various income percentiles of global income distribution.[82]

Trade liberalization may shift economic inequality from a global to a domestic scale.[83] When rich countries trade with poor countries, the low-skilled workers in the rich countries may see reduced wages as a result of the competition, while low-skilled workers in the poor countries may see increased wages. Trade economist Paul Krugman estimates that trade liberalisation has had a measurable effect on the rising inequality in the United States. He attributes this trend to increased trade with poor countries and the fragmentation of the means of production, resulting in low skilled jobs becoming more tradeable.[84]

Anthropologist Jason Hickel contends that globalization and "structural adjustment" set off the "race to the bottom", a significant driver of surging global inequality. Another driver Hickel mentions is the debt system which advanced the need for structural adjustment in the first place.[85]

Gender

 
The gender gap in median earnings of full-time employees according to the OECD 2015[86]

In many countries, there is a gender pay gap in favor of males in the labor market. Several factors other than discrimination contribute to this gap. On average, women are more likely than men to consider factors other than pay when looking for work, and may be less willing to travel or relocate.[87][88] Thomas Sowell, in his book Knowledge and Decisions, claims that this difference is due to women not taking jobs due to marriage or pregnancy. A U.S. Census's report stated that in US once other factors are accounted for there is still a difference in earnings between women and men.[89] A study done on three post-soviet countries Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan reveals that gender is one of the driving forces of income inequality, and being a female have significant negative effect on income, when other factors are held equal. The results show more than 50% gender pay gap in all three countries.[90] These findings are because usually employers tend to avoid hiring women because of possible maternity leave. Other reason for this can be occupational segregation, which implies that women are usually accumulated in lower-paid positions and sectors, such as social services and education.

Race

There is also a globally recognized disparity in the wealth, income, and economic welfare of people of different races. In many nations, data exists to suggest that members of certain racial demographics experience lower wages, fewer opportunities for career and educational advancement, and intergenerational wealth gaps.[91] Studies have uncovered the emergence of what is called "ethnic capital", by which people belonging to a race that has experienced discrimination are born into a disadvantaged family from the beginning and therefore have less resources and opportunities at their disposal.[92][93] The universal lack of education, technical and cognitive skills, and inheritable wealth within a particular race is often passed down between generations, compounding in effect to make escaping these racialized cycles of poverty increasingly difficult.[93] Additionally, ethnic groups that experience significant disparities are often also minorities, at least in representation though often in number as well, in the nations where they experience the harshest disadvantage. As a result, they are often segregated either by government policy or social stratification, leading to ethnic communities that experience widespread gaps in wealth and aid.[94]

As a general rule, races which have been historically and systematically colonized (typically indigenous ethnicities) continue to experience lower levels of financial stability in the present day. The global South is considered to be particularly victimized by this phenomenon, though the exact socioeconomic manifestations change across different regions.[91]

Westernized Nations

Even in economically developed societies with high levels of modernization such as may be found in Western Europe, North America, and Australia, minority ethnic groups and immigrant populations in particular experience financial discrimination.[citation needed] While the progression of civil rights movements and justice reform has improved access to education and other economic opportunities in politically advanced nations, racial income and wealth disparity still prove significant.[95] In the United States for example, a survey[when?] of African-American populations show that they are more likely to drop out of high school and college, are typically employed for fewer hours at lower wages, have lower than average intergenerational wealth, and are more likely to use welfare as young adults than their white counterparts.[96]

Mexican-Americans, while suffering less debilitating socioeconomic factors than black Americans, experience deficiencies in the same areas when compared to whites and have not assimilated financially to the level of stability experienced by white Americans as a whole.[97] These experiences are the effects of the measured disparity due to race in countries like the US, where studies show that in comparison to whites, blacks suffer from drastically lower levels of upward mobility, higher levels of downward mobility, and poverty that is more easily transmitted to offspring as a result of the disadvantage stemming from the era of slavery and post-slavery racism that has been passed through racial generations to the present.[98][99][100] These are lasting financial inequalities that apply in varying magnitudes to most non-white populations in nations such as the US, the UK, France, Spain, Australia, etc.[91]

Latin America

In the countries of the Caribbean, Central America, and South America, many ethnicities continue to deal with the effects of European colonization, and in general nonwhites tend to be noticeably poorer than whites in this region. In many countries with significant populations of indigenous races and those of Afro-descent (such as Mexico, Colombia, Chile, etc.) income levels can be roughly half as high as those experiences by white demographics, and this inequity is accompanied by systematically unequal access to education, career opportunities, and poverty relief. This region of the world, apart from urbanizing areas like Brazil and Costa Rica, continues to be understudied and often the racial disparity is denied by Latin Americans who consider themselves to be living in post-racial and post-colonial societies far removed from intense social and economic stratification despite the evidence to the contrary.[101]

Africa

African countries, too, continue to deal with the effects of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, which set back economic development as a whole for blacks of African citizenship more than any other region. The degree to which colonizers stratified their holdings on the continent on the basis of race has had a direct correlation in the magnitude of disparity experienced by nonwhites in the nations that eventually rose from their colonial status. Former French colonies, for example, see much higher rates of income inequality between whites and nonwhites as a result of the rigid hierarchy imposed by the French who lived in Africa at the time.[102] Another example is found in South Africa, which, still reeling from the socioeconomic impacts of Apartheid, experiences some of the highest racial income and wealth inequality in all of Africa.[98] In these and other countries like Nigeria, Zimbabwe, and Sierra Leone, movements of civil reform have initially led to improved access to financial advancement opportunities, but data[when?] shows that for nonwhites this progress is either stalling or erasing itself in the newest generation of blacks that seek education and improved transgenerational wealth. The economic status of one's parents continues to define and predict the financial futures of African and minority ethnic groups.[103][needs update]

Asia

Asian regions and countries such as China, the Middle East, and Central Asia have been vastly understudied in terms of racial disparity, but even here the effects of Western colonization provide similar results to those found in other parts of the globe.[91] Additionally, cultural and historical practices such as the caste system in India leave their marks as well. While the disparity is greatly improving in the case of India, there still exists social stratification between peoples of lighter and darker skin tones that cumulatively result in income and wealth inequality, manifesting in many of the same poverty traps seen elsewhere.[104]

Economic development

 
A Kuznets curve

Economist Simon Kuznets argued that levels of economic inequality are in large part the result of stages of development. According to Kuznets, countries with low levels of development have relatively equal distributions of wealth. As a country develops, it acquires more capital, which leads to the owners of this capital having more wealth and income and introducing inequality. Eventually, through various possible redistribution mechanisms such as social welfare programs, more developed countries move back to lower levels of inequality.[105]

Wealth concentration

 
As of 2022, Elon Musk is the richest person in the world.

Wealth concentration is the process by which, under certain conditions, newly created wealth concentrates in the possession of already-wealthy individuals or entities. Accordingly, those who already hold wealth have the means to invest in new sources of creating wealth or to otherwise leverage the accumulation of wealth, and thus they are the beneficiaries of the new wealth. Over time, wealth concentration can significantly contribute to the persistence of inequality within society. Thomas Piketty in his book Capital in the Twenty-First Century argues that the fundamental force for divergence is the usually greater return of capital (r) than economic growth (g), and that larger fortunes generate higher returns.[106]

Rent seeking

Economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that rather than explaining concentrations of wealth and income, market forces should serve as a brake on such concentration, which may better be explained by the non-market force known as "rent-seeking" or unjust enrichment. While the market will bid up compensation for rare and desired skills to reward wealth creation, greater productivity, etc., it will also prevent successful entrepreneurs from earning excess profits by fostering competition to cut prices, profits and large compensation.[107] A better explainer of growing inequality, according to Stiglitz, is the use of political power generated by wealth by certain groups to shape government policies financially beneficial to them. This process, known to economists as rent-seeking, brings income not from creation of wealth but from "grabbing a larger share of the wealth that would otherwise have been produced without their effort".[108]

Finance industry

Jamie Galbraith argues that countries with larger financial sectors have greater inequality, and the link is not an accident.[109][110][why?]

Global warming

A 2019 study published in PNAS found that global warming plays a role in increasing economic inequality between countries, boosting economic growth in developed countries while hampering such growth in developing nations of the Global South. The study says that 25% of gap between the developed world and the developing world can be attributed to global warming.[111]

A 2020 report by Oxfam and the Stockholm Environment Institute says that the wealthiest 10% of the global population were responsible for more than half of global carbon dioxide emissions from 1990 to 2015, which increased by 60%.[112] According to a 2020 report by the UNEP, overconsumption by the rich is a significant driver of the climate crisis, and the wealthiest 1% of the world's population are responsible for more than double the greenhouse gas emissions of the poorest 50% combined. Inger Andersen, in the foreword to the report, said "this elite will need to reduce their footprint by a factor of 30 to stay in line with the Paris Agreement targets."[113] A 2022 report by Oxfam found that the business investments of the wealthiest 125 billionaires emit 393 million metric tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions annually.[114]

Politics

Joseph Stiglitz argues in The Price of Inequality (2012) that the economic inequality is inevitable and permanent, because it is caused by the great amount of political power the richest have.[57] He wrote, "While there may be underlying economic forces at play, politics have shaped the market, and shaped it in ways that advantage the top at the expense of the rest."

Mitigating factors

 
Data shows substantial social segregation correlating with economic income groups.[115] However, social connectedness to people of higher income levels is a strong predictor of upward income mobility.[115]

Countries with a left-leaning legislature generally have lower levels of inequality.[116][117] Many factors constrain economic inequality – they may be divided into two classes: government sponsored, and market driven. The relative merits and effectiveness of each approach is a subject of debate.

Typical government initiatives to reduce economic inequality include:

  • Public education: increasing the supply of skilled labor and reducing income inequality due to education differentials.[118]
  • Progressive taxation: the rich are taxed proportionally more than the poor, reducing the amount of income inequality in society if the change in taxation does not cause changes in income.[119]

Market forces outside of government intervention that can reduce economic inequality include:

  • propensity to spend: with rising wealth & income, a person may spend more. In an extreme example, if one person owned everything, they would immediately need to hire people to maintain their properties, thus reducing the wealth concentration.[120] On the other hand, high-income persons have higher propensity to save.[121] Robin Maialeh then shows that increasing economic wealth decreases propensity to spend and increases propensity to invest which consequently leads to even greater growth rate of already rich agents.[122]

Research shows that since 1300, the only periods with significant declines in wealth inequality in Europe were the Black Death and the two World Wars.[123] Historian Walter Scheidel posits that, since the Stone Age, only extreme violence, catastrophes and upheaval in the form of total war, Communist revolution, pestilence and state collapse have significantly reduced inequality.[124][125] He has stated that "only all-out thermonuclear war might fundamentally reset the existing distribution of resources" and that "peaceful policy reform may well prove unequal to the growing challenges ahead."[126][127]

Policy responses intended to mitigate

A 2011 OECD study makes a number of suggestions to its member countries, including:[16]

  • Well-targeted income-support policies.
  • Facilitation and encouragement of access to employment.
  • Better job-related training and education for the low-skilled (on-the-job training) would help to boost their productivity potential and future earnings.
  • Better access to formal education.

Progressive taxation reduces absolute income inequality when the higher rates on higher-income individuals are paid and not evaded, and transfer payments and social safety nets result in progressive government spending.[128][129][130] Wage ratio legislation has also been proposed as a means of reducing income inequality. The OECD asserts that public spending is vital in reducing the ever-expanding wealth gap.[131]

Deferred investment programs that increase stock ownership amongst lower income levels can supplement income to compensate wage stagnation.[58]

The economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty recommend much higher top marginal tax rates on the wealthy, up to 50 percent, 70 percent or even 90 percent.[132] Ralph Nader, Jeffrey Sachs, the United Front Against Austerity, among others, call for a financial transaction tax (also known as the Robin Hood tax) to bolster the social safety net and the public sector.[133][134]

The Economist wrote in December 2013: "A minimum wage, providing it is not set too high, could thus boost pay with no ill effects on jobs....America's federal minimum wage, at 38% of median income, is one of the rich world's lowest. Some studies find no harm to employment from federal or state minimum wages, others see a small one, but none finds any serious damage."[135]

General limitations on and taxation of rent-seeking are popular across the political spectrum.[136]

Public policy responses addressing causes and effects of income inequality in the US include: progressive tax incidence adjustments, strengthening social safety net provisions such as Aid to Families with Dependent Children, welfare, the food stamp program, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, organizing community interest groups, increasing and reforming higher education subsidies, increasing infrastructure spending, and placing limits on and taxing rent-seeking.[137]

A 2017 study in the Journal of Political Economy by Daron Acemoglu, James Robinson and Thierry Verdier argues that American "cutthroat" capitalism and inequality gives rise to technology and innovation that more "cuddly" forms of capitalism cannot.[138] As a result, "the diversity of institutions we observe among relatively advanced countries, ranging from greater inequality and risk-taking in the United States to the more egalitarian societies supported by a strong safety net in Scandinavia, rather than reflecting differences in fundamentals between the citizens of these societies, may emerge as a mutually self-reinforcing world equilibrium. If so, in this equilibrium, 'we cannot all be like the Scandinavians,' because Scandinavian capitalism depends in part on the knowledge spillovers created by the more cutthroat American capitalism."[138] A 2012 working paper by the same authors, making similar arguments, was challenged by Lane Kenworthy, who posited that, among other things, the Nordic countries are consistently ranked as some of the world's most innovative countries by the World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Index, with Sweden ranking as the most innovative nation, followed by Finland, for 2012–2013; the U.S. ranked sixth.[139]

There are however global initiative like the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 10 which aims to garner international efforts in reducing economic inequality considerably by 2030.[140]

Effects

A lot of research has been done about the effects of economic inequality on different aspects in society:

  • Health: For long time the higher material living standards lead to longer life, as those people were able to get enough food, water and access to warmth. British researchers Richard G. Wilkinson and Kate Pickett have found higher rates of health and social problems (obesity, mental illness, homicides, teenage births, incarceration, child conflict, drug use) in countries and states with higher inequality.[141][142] Their research included 24 developed countries, including most U.S. states, and found that in the more developed countries, such as Finland and Japan, the heath issues are much lower than in states with rather higher inequality rates, such as Utah and New Hampshire. Some studies link a surge in "deaths of despair", suicide, drug overdoses and alcohol related deaths, to widening income inequality.[143][144] Conversely, other research did not find these effects or concluded that research suffered from issues of confounding variables.[145]
  • Social goods: British researchers Richard G. Wilkinson and Kate Pickett have found lower rates of social goods (life expectancy by country, educational performance, trust among strangers, women's status, social mobility, even numbers of patents issued) in countries and states with higher inequality.[141][142]
  • Social cohesion: Research has shown an inverse link between income inequality and social cohesion. In more equal societies, people are much more likely to trust each other, measures of social capital (the benefits of goodwill, fellowship, mutual sympathy and social connectedness among groups who make up a social units) suggest greater community involvement.
  • Crime: The cross national research shows that in societies with less economic inequality the homicide rates are consistently lower.[146] A 2016 study finds that interregional inequality increases terrorism.[147] Other research has argued inequality has little effect on crime rates.[148][149]
  • Welfare: Studies have found evidence that in societies where inequality is lower, population-wide satisfaction and happiness tend to be higher.[150][151][152][153]
  • Poverty: Study made by Jared Bernstein and Elise Gould suggest, that the poverty in the United States could have been reduced by the lowering of economic inequality for the past few decades.[154][155]
  • Debt: Income inequality has been the driving factor in the growing household debt,[156][157] as high earners bid up the price of real estate and middle income earners go deeper into debt trying to maintain what once was a middle class lifestyle.[158]
  • Economic growth: A 2016 meta-analysis found that "the effect of inequality on growth is negative and more pronounced in less developed countries than in rich countries", though the average impact on growth was not significant. The study also found that wealth inequality is more pernicious to growth than income inequality.[13]
  • Civic participation: Higher income inequality led to less of all forms of social, cultural, and civic participation among the less wealthy.[159]
  • Political instability: Studies indicate that economic inequality leads to greater political instability, including an increased risk of democratic breakdown[11][160][161][162][163] and civil conflict.[164][12] A significant impact of inequality on civil war probability has been found through anthropometric methods.[165]
  • Political party responses: One study finds that economic inequality prompts attempts by left-leaning politicians to pursue redistributive policies while right-leaning politicians seek to repress the redistributive policies.[166]

Perspectives

Fairness vs. equality

According to Christina Starmans et al. (Nature Hum. Beh., 2017), the research literature contains no evidence on people having an aversion on inequality. In all studies analyzed, the subjects preferred fair distributions (inequity aversion) to equal distributions, in both laboratory and real-world situations. In public, researchers may loosely speak of equality instead of fairness, when referring to studies where fairness happens to coincide with equality, but in many studies fairness is carefully separated from equality and the results are univocal. Very young children seem to prefer fairness over equality.[167]

When people were asked, what would be the wealth of each quintile in their ideal society, they gave a 50-fold sum to the richest quintile than to the poorest quintile. The preference for inequality increases in adolescence, and so do the capabilities to favor fortune, effort and ability in the distribution.[167]

Preference for unequal distribution has been developed to the human race possibly because it allows for better co-operation and allows a person to work with a more productive person so that both parties benefit from the co-operation. Inequality is also said to be able to solve the problems of free-riders, cheaters and ill-behaving people, although this is heavily debated.[167] Researches demonstrate that people usually underestimate the level of actual inequality, which is also much higher than their desired level of inequality.[168]

In many societies, such as the USSR, the distribution led to protests from wealthier landowners.[169] In the current U.S., many feel that the distribution is unfair in being too unequal. In both cases, the cause is unfairness, not inequality, the researchers conclude.[167]

Socialist perspectives

Socialists attribute the vast disparities in wealth to the private ownership of the means of production by a class of owners, creating a situation where a small portion of the population lives off unearned property income by virtue of ownership titles in capital equipment, financial assets and corporate stock. By contrast, the vast majority of the population is dependent on income in the form of a wage or salary. In order to rectify this situation, socialists argue that the means of production should be socially owned so that income differentials would be reflective of individual contributions to the social product.[170]

Marxian economics attributes rising inequality to job automation and capital deepening within capitalism. The process of job automation conflicts with the capitalist property form and its attendant system of wage labor. In this analysis, capitalist firms increasingly substitute capital equipment for labor inputs (workers) under competitive pressure to reduce costs and maximize profits. Over the long term, this trend increases the organic composition of capital, meaning that less workers are required in proportion to capital inputs, increasing unemployment (the "reserve army of labour"). This process exerts a downward pressure on wages. The substitution of capital equipment for labor (mechanization and automation) raises the productivity of each worker, resulting in a situation of relatively stagnant wages for the working class amidst rising levels of property income for the capitalist class.[171]

Marxist socialists ultimately predict the emergence of a communist society based on the common ownership of the means of production, where each individual citizen would have free access to the articles of consumption (From each according to his ability, to each according to his need). According to Marxist philosophy, equality in the sense of free access is essential for freeing individuals from dependent relationships, thereby allowing them to transcend alienation.[172]

Meritocracy

Meritocracy favors an eventual society where an individual's success is a direct function of his merit, or contribution. Economic inequality would be a natural consequence of the wide range in individual skill, talent and effort in human population. David Landes stated that the progression of Western economic development that led to the Industrial Revolution was facilitated by men advancing through their own merit rather than because of family or political connections.[173]

Liberal perspectives

Most modern social liberals, including centrist or left-of-center political groups, believe that the capitalist economic system should be fundamentally preserved, but the status quo regarding the income gap must be reformed. Social liberals favor a capitalist system with active Keynesian macroeconomic policies and progressive taxation (to even out differences in income inequality). Research indicates that people who hold liberal beliefs tend to see greater income inequality as morally wrong.[174]

However, contemporary classical liberals and libertarians generally do not take a stance on wealth inequality, but believe in equality under the law regardless of whether it leads to unequal wealth distribution. In 1966 Ludwig von Mises, a prominent figure in the Austrian School of economic thought, explains:

The liberal champions of equality under the law were fully aware of the fact that men are born unequal and that it is precisely their inequality that generates social cooperation and civilization. Equality under the law was in their opinion not designed to correct the inexorable facts of the universe and to make natural inequality disappear. It was, on the contrary, the device to secure for the whole of mankind the maximum of benefits it can derive from it. Henceforth no man-made institutions should prevent a man from attaining that station in which he can best serve his fellow citizens.

Robert Nozick argued that government redistributes wealth by force (usually in the form of taxation), and that the ideal moral society would be one where all individuals are free from force. However, Nozick recognized that some modern economic inequalities were the result of forceful taking of property, and a certain amount of redistribution would be justified to compensate for this force but not because of the inequalities themselves.[175] John Rawls argued in A Theory of Justice[176] that inequalities in the distribution of wealth are only justified when they improve society as a whole, including the poorest members. Rawls does not discuss the full implications of his theory of justice. Some see Rawls's argument as a justification for capitalism since even the poorest members of society theoretically benefit from increased innovations under capitalism; others believe only a strong welfare state can satisfy Rawls's theory of justice.[177]

Classical liberal Milton Friedman believed that if government action is taken in pursuit of economic equality then political freedom would suffer. In a famous quote, he said:

A society that puts equality before freedom will get neither. A society that puts freedom before equality will get a high degree of both.

Economist Tyler Cowen has argued that though income inequality has increased within nations, globally it has fallen over the 20 years leading up to 2014. He argues that though income inequality may make individual nations worse off, overall, the world has improved as global inequality has been reduced.[178]

Social justice arguments

Patrick Diamond and Anthony Giddens (professors of Economics and Sociology, respectively) hold that 'pure meritocracy is incoherent because, without redistribution, one generation's successful individuals would become the next generation's embedded caste, hoarding the wealth they had accumulated'.[179]

They also state that social justice requires redistribution of high incomes and large concentrations of wealth in a way that spreads it more widely, in order to "recognize the contribution made by all sections of the community to building the nation's wealth." (Patrick Diamond and Anthony Giddens, June 27, 2005, New Statesman)[180]

Pope Francis stated in his Evangelii gaudium, that "as long as the problems of the poor are not radically resolved by rejecting the absolute autonomy of markets and financial speculation and by attacking the structural causes of inequality, no solution will be found for the world's problems or, for that matter, to any problems."[181] He later declared that "inequality is the root of social evil."[182]

When income inequality is low, aggregate demand will be relatively high, because more people who want ordinary consumer goods and services will be able to afford them, while the labor force will not be as relatively monopolized by the wealthy.[183]

Effects on social welfare

In most western democracies, the desire to eliminate or reduce economic inequality is generally associated with the political left. One practical argument in favor of reduction is the idea that economic inequality reduces social cohesion and increases social unrest, thereby weakening the society. There is evidence that this is true (see inequity aversion) and it is intuitive, at least for small face-to-face groups of people.[184] Alberto Alesina, Rafael Di Tella, and Robert MacCulloch find that inequality negatively affects happiness in Europe but not in the United States.[185]

It has also been argued that economic inequality invariably translates to political inequality, which further aggravates the problem. Even in cases where an increase in economic inequality makes nobody economically poorer, an increased inequality of resources is disadvantageous, as increased economic inequality can lead to a power shift due to an increased inequality in the ability to participate in democratic processes.[186]

Capabilities approach

The capabilities approach – sometimes called the human development approach – looks at income inequality and poverty as form of "capability deprivation".[187] Unlike neoliberalism, which "defines well-being as utility maximization", economic growth and income are considered a means to an end rather than the end itself.[188] Its goal is to "wid[en] people's choices and the level of their achieved well-being"[189] through increasing functioning (the things a person values doing), capabilities (the freedom to enjoy functionings) and agency (the ability to pursue valued goals).[190]

When a person's capabilities are lowered, they are in some way deprived of earning as much income as they would otherwise. An old, ill man cannot earn as much as a healthy young man; gender roles and customs may prevent a woman from receiving an education or working outside the home. There may be an epidemic that causes widespread panic, or there could be rampant violence in the area that prevents people from going to work for fear of their lives.[187] As a result, income inequality increases, and it becomes more difficult to reduce the gap without additional aid.

See also

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  186. ^ The relation between economic inequality and political inequality is explained by Robert Alan Dahl in the chapters The Presence of a Market Economy (p. 63), The Distribution of Political Resources (p. 84) und Market Capitalism and Human Dispositions (p. 87) in On Political Equality, 2006, 120 pages, Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0300126877
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  188. ^ Fukuda-Parr, Sakiko (2003). "The Human Development Paradigm: Operationalizing Sen's Ideas on Capabilities". Feminist Economics. 9 (2–3): 301–17. doi:10.1080/1354570022000077980. S2CID 18178004.
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  190. ^ Deneulin, Séverine; Alkire, Sabina (2009), "The human development and capability approach", in Deneulin, Séverine; Shahani, Lila (eds.), An introduction to the human development and capability approach freedom and agency, Sterling, VA & Ottawa, Ontario: Earthscan International Development Research Centre, pp. 22–48, ISBN 978-1844078066

Further reading

Books
Articles
  • Ahamed, Liaquat (September 2, 2019). "Widening Gyre: The rise and fall and rise of economic inequality". The New Yorker. pp. 26–29. [T]here seems to [be] some sort of cap on inequality – a limit to the economic divisions a country can ultimately cope with.
  • Alesina, Alberto; Di Tella, Rafael; MacCulloch, Robert (2004). "Inequality and happiness: Are Europeans and Americans different?". Journal of Public Economics. 88 (9–10): 2009–42. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.203.664. doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2003.07.006.
economic, inequality, more, general, social, form, social, inequality, other, uses, inequality, rich, poor, redirects, here, other, uses, rich, poor, there, wide, varieties, economic, inequality, most, notably, income, inequality, measured, using, distribution. For the more general social form see Social inequality For other uses see Inequality Rich and poor redirects here For other uses see Rich and Poor There are wide varieties of economic inequality most notably income inequality measured using the distribution of income the amount of money people are paid and wealth inequality measured using the distribution of wealth the amount of wealth people own Besides economic inequality between countries or states there are important types of economic inequality between different groups of people 2 Differences in national income equality around the world as measured by the national Gini coefficient as of 2018 1 The Gini coefficient is a number between 0 and 100 where 0 corresponds with perfect equality where everyone has the same income and 100 corresponds with absolute inequality where one person has all the income and everyone else has zero income Global share of wealth by wealth group Credit Suisse 2021 Wealth disparity in major citiesTents of the homeless on the sidewalk in Skid Row Los AngelesAn affluent house in Holmby Hills Los Angeles roughly 12 miles from downtown above Important types of economic measurements focus on wealth income and consumption There are many methods for measuring economic inequality 3 the Gini coefficient being a widely used one Another type of measure is the Inequality adjusted Human Development Index which is a statistic composite index that takes inequality into account 4 Important concepts of equality include equity equality of outcome and equality of opportunity Whereas globalization has reduced global inequality between nations it has increased inequality within nations 5 6 7 8 Income inequality between nations peaked in the 1970s when world income was distributed bimodally into rich and poor countries Since then income levels across countries have been converging with most people now living in middle income countries 5 9 However inequality within most nations has risen significantly in the last 30 years particularly among advanced countries 5 6 7 8 In this period close to 90 percent of advanced economies have seen an increase in income inequality with over 70 recording an increase in their Gini coefficients exceeding two points 5 Research has generally linked economic inequality to political and social instability including revolution democratic breakdown and civil conflict 5 10 11 12 Research suggests that greater inequality hinders economic growth and macroeconomic stability and that land and human capital inequality reduce growth more than inequality of income 5 13 Inequality is at the center stage of economic policy debate across the globe as government tax and spending policies have significant effects on income distribution 5 In advanced economies taxes and transfers decrease income inequality by one third with most of this being achieved via public social spending such as pensions and family benefits 5 Contents 1 Measurements 1 1 Wealth distribution within individual countries 1 2 Income distribution within individual countries 1 3 Consumption distribution within individual countries 2 Factors proposed to affect economic inequality 2 1 Labour market 2 2 Taxes 2 3 Education 2 4 Economic liberalism deregulation and decline of unions 2 5 Information technology 2 6 Globalization 2 7 Gender 2 8 Race 2 8 1 Westernized Nations 2 8 2 Latin America 2 8 3 Africa 2 8 4 Asia 2 9 Economic development 2 10 Wealth concentration 2 11 Rent seeking 2 12 Finance industry 2 13 Global warming 2 14 Politics 3 Mitigating factors 3 1 Policy responses intended to mitigate 4 Effects 5 Perspectives 5 1 Fairness vs equality 5 2 Socialist perspectives 5 3 Meritocracy 5 4 Liberal perspectives 5 5 Social justice arguments 5 6 Effects on social welfare 5 7 Capabilities approach 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Historical 9 External linksMeasurements EditMain articles Income inequality metrics and List of countries by income equality Share of income of the top 1 for selected developed countries 1975 to 2015 In 1820 the ratio between the income of the top and bottom 20 percent of the world s population was three to one By 1991 it was eighty six to one 14 A 2011 study titled Divided we Stand Why Inequality Keeps Rising by the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD sought to explain the causes for this rising inequality by investigating economic inequality in OECD countries it concluded that the following factors played a role 15 Changes in the structure of households can play an important role Single headed households in OECD countries have risen from an average of 15 in the late 1980s to 20 in the mid 2000s resulting in higher inequality Assortative mating refers to the phenomenon of people marrying people with similar background for example doctors marrying other doctors rather than nurses OECD found out that 40 of couples where both partners work belonged to the same or neighbouring earnings deciles compared with 33 some 20 years before 16 In the bottom percentiles number of hours worked has decreased 16 The main reason for increasing inequality seems to be the difference between the demand for and supply of skills 16 The study made the following conclusions about the level of economic inequality Income inequality in OECD countries is at its highest level for the past half century The ratio between the bottom 10 and the top 10 has increased from 1 7 to 1 9 in 25 years 16 There are tentative signs of a possible convergence of inequality levels towards a common and higher average level across OECD countries 16 With very few exceptions France Japan and Spain the wages of the 10 best paid workers have risen relative to those of the 10 lowest paid 16 A 2011 OECD study investigated economic inequality in Argentina Brazil China India Indonesia Russia and South Africa It concluded that key sources of inequality in these countries include a large persistent informal sector widespread regional divides e g urban rural gaps in access to education and barriers to employment and career progression for women 16 Countries by total wealth trillions USD Credit Suisse World map of countries by the inequality adjusted Human Development Index A study by the World Institute for Development Economics Research at United Nations University reported that the richest 1 of adults alone owned 40 of global assets in the year 2000 The three richest people in the world possess more financial assets than the lowest 48 nations combined 17 The combined wealth of the 10 million dollar millionaires grew to nearly 41 trillion in 2008 18 Oxfam s 2021 report on global inequality said that the COVID 19 pandemic has increased economic inequality substantially the wealthiest people across the globe were impacted the least by the pandemic and their fortunes recovered quickest with billionaires seeing their wealth increase by 3 9 trillion while at the same time the number of people living on less than 5 50 a day likely increased by 500 million 19 The 2022 Oxfam report said that growing economic inequality has been a factor in increased mortality rates during the pandemic contributing to the deaths of 21 000 people on a daily basis while the wealth of the world s 10 richest billionaires doubled 20 21 The 2023 report stated that roughly two thirds of all new wealth went to the top 1 at the same time that extreme poverty has been increasing globally 22 According to economist Joseph Stiglitz the pandemic s most significant outcome will be rising economic inequality in the United States and between the developed and developing world 23 Wealth inequality in the United States increased from 1989 to 2013 24 According to PolitiFact the top 400 richest Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined 25 26 27 28 According to The New York Times on July 22 2014 the richest 1 percent in the United States now own more wealth than the bottom 90 percent 29 Inherited wealth may help explain why many Americans who have become rich may have had a substantial head start 30 31 A 2017 report by the IPS said that three individuals Jeff Bezos Bill Gates and Warren Buffett own as much wealth as the bottom half of the population or 160 million people and that the growing disparity between the wealthy and the poor has created a moral crisis noting that we have not witnessed such extreme levels of concentrated wealth and power since the first gilded age a century ago 32 33 In 2016 the world s billionaires increased their combined global wealth to a record 6 trillion 34 In 2017 they increased their collective wealth to 8 9 trillion 35 In 2018 U S income inequality reached the highest level ever recorded by the Census Bureau 36 The existing data and estimates suggest a large increase in international and more generally inter macroregional components between 1820 and 1960 It might have slightly decreased since that time at the expense of increasing inequality within countries 37 The United Nations Development Programme in 2014 asserted that greater investments in social security jobs and laws that protect vulnerable populations are necessary to prevent widening income inequality 38 There is a significant difference in the measured wealth distribution and the public s understanding of wealth distribution Michael Norton of the Harvard Business School and Dan Ariely of the Department of Psychology at Duke University found this to be true in their research conducted in 2011 The actual wealth going to the top quintile in 2011 was around 84 whereas the average amount of wealth that the general public estimated to go to the top quintile was around 58 39 According to a 2020 study global earnings inequality has decreased substantially since 1970 During the 2000s and 2010s the share of earnings by the world s poorest half doubled 40 Two researchers claim that global income inequality is decreasing due to strong economic growth in developing countries 41 According to a January 2020 report by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs economic inequality between states had declined but intrastate inequality has increased for 70 of the world population over the period 1990 2015 42 In 2015 the OECD reported in 2015 that income inequality is higher than it has ever been within OECD member nations and is at increased levels in many emerging economies 43 According to a June 2015 report by the International Monetary Fund IMF Widening income inequality is the defining challenge of our time In advanced economies the gap between the rich and poor is at its highest level in decades Inequality trends have been more mixed in emerging markets and developing countries EMDCs with some countries experiencing declining inequality but pervasive inequities in access to education health care and finance remain 44 In October 2017 the IMF warned that inequality within nations in spite of global inequality falling in recent decades has risen so sharply that it threatens economic growth and could result in further political polarization The Fund s Fiscal Monitor report said that progressive taxation and transfers are key components of efficient fiscal redistribution 45 In October 2018 Oxfam published a Reducing Inequality Index which measured social spending tax and workers rights to show which countries were best at closing the gap between the rich and the poor 46 The 2022 World Inequality Report a four year research project organized by the economists Lucas Chancel Thomas Piketty Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman shows that the world is marked by a very high level of income inequality and an extreme level of wealth inequality and that these inequalities seem to be about as great today as they were at the peak of western imperialism in the early 20th century According to the report the bottom half of the population owns 2 of global wealth while the top 10 owns 76 of it The top 1 owns 38 47 48 49 Wealth distribution within individual countries Edit Main articles List of countries by wealth per adult and Wealth distribution The following table shows information about individual wealth distribution in different countries from a 2018 report by Credit Suisse 50 The wealth is calculated by various factors for instance liabilities debts exchange rates and their expected development real estate prices human resources natural resources and technical advancements etc 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174 Median and mean wealth per adult in US dollars Countries and subnational areas Initially in rank order by median wealth Country orsubnational area Median wealthper adult US dollars Mean wealthper adult US dollars Ratio of medianto mean Adults thousands Iceland 203 847 555 726 36 9 248 Australia 191 453 411 060 46 6 18 433 Switzerland 183 339 530 244 34 6 6 811 Luxembourg 164 284 412 127 39 9 456 Belgium 163 429 313 045 52 2 8 869 Netherlands 114 935 253 205 45 4 13 260 France 106 827 280 580 38 1 49 478 Canada 106 342 288 263 36 9 28 858 Japan 103 861 227 235 45 7 105 108 New Zealand 98 613 289 798 34 0 3 486 United Kingdom 97 169 279 048 34 8 50 919 Singapore 91 656 283 118 32 4 4 552 Spain 87 188 191 177 45 6 37 410 Norway 80 054 291 103 27 5 4 057 Italy 79 239 217 787 36 4 48 527 Taiwan 78 177 212 375 36 8 19 139 Malta 76 116 140 629 54 1 347 Ireland 72 473 232 952 31 1 3 460 Austria 70 074 231 368 30 3 7 075 South Korea 65 463 171 739 38 1 41 381 United States 61 667 403 974 15 3 242 972 Denmark 60 999 286 712 21 3 4 450 Qatar 59 978 121 638 49 3 2 177 Hong Kong 58 905 244 672 24 1 6 224 Israel 54 966 174 129 31 6 5 405 Finland 45 606 161 062 28 3 4 327 Greece 40 789 108 127 37 7 9 019 Sweden 39 709 249 765 15 9 7 689 Germany 35 169 214 893 16 4 67 470 Slovenia 34 043 79 097 43 0 1 676 Portugal 31 313 109 362 28 6 8 377 Libya 26 939 61 701 43 7 4 085 Kuwait 26 278 91 374 28 8 3 045 United Arab Emirates 25 267 88 173 28 7 7 752 Chile 23 812 62 222 38 3 13 166 Seychelles 21 349 48 652 43 9 68 Slovakia 21 203 34 781 61 0 4 339 Estonia 18 895 57 806 32 7 1 034 Croatia 17 131 35 951 47 7 3 342 Czech Republic 17 018 61 489 27 7 8 529 Mauritius 16 472 35 668 46 2 943 China 16 333 47 810 34 2 1 085 003 Hungary 15 026 37 594 40 0 7 826 Aruba 14 901 45 612 32 7 79 Oman 14 304 41 804 34 2 3 450 Brunei 14 154 42 925 33 0 298 Bahrain 13 385 38 882 34 4 1 153 Saudi Arabia 12 847 43 174 29 8 22 629 Uruguay 12 556 39 194 32 0 2 484 Montenegro 12 060 24 746 48 7 475 Bahamas 11 385 47 822 23 8 288 Lithuania 11 161 24 600 45 4 2 306 Bulgaria 11 013 23 984 45 9 5 752 Poland 10 572 31 794 33 3 30 626 Cyprus 10 384 100 308 10 4 909 Costa Rica 9 813 31 717 30 9 3 490 Barbados 8 522 28 762 29 6 213 Panama 8 358 28 897 28 9 2 655 Albania 8 157 16 957 48 1 2 201 Latvia 7 540 33 958 22 2 1 557 Georgia 7 078 16 725 42 3 2 940 Malaysia 7 000 27 970 25 0 21 372 Gabon 6 973 16 342 42 7 1 124 Tonga 6 796 15 255 44 6 58 Bosnia and Herzegovina 6 762 14 110 47 9 2 805 South Africa 6 726 22 191 30 3 35 434 Romania 6 658 20 321 32 8 15 582 Samoa 6 516 18 154 35 9 105 Iraq 6 515 14 192 45 9 19 160 Tunisia 6 226 14 932 41 7 8 014 Peru 6 036 22 508 26 8 20 766 Mexico 5 784 20 620 28 1 83 850 Jordan 5 745 13 328 43 1 5 371 North Macedonia 5 640 12 551 44 9 1 612 Dominica 5 548 23 937 23 2 54 Trinidad and Tobago 5 076 15 719 32 3 1 002 Colombia 4 937 18 239 27 1 33 751 Serbia 4 903 10 743 45 6 6 809 Turkmenistan 4 824 10 446 46 2 3 548 Antigua and Barbuda 4 712 19 497 24 2 70 El Salvador 4 616 15 219 30 3 4 024 Mongolia 4 616 10 295 44 8 1 960 Brazil 24 263 31 724 32 6 145 836 Namibia 3 944 11 704 33 7 1 356 Lebanon 3 932 33 726 11 7 4 162 Solomon Islands 3 835 9 035 42 5 312 Grenada 3 704 16 081 23 0 71 Botswana 3 652 10 793 33 8 1 375 Saint Lucia 3 525 11 146 31 6 131 Azerbaijan 3 410 7 530 45 3 6 915 Armenia 3 391 7 583 44 7 2 175 Fiji 3 254 8 031 40 5 574 Ecuador 3 211 11 068 29 0 10 507 Argentina 3 176 11 530 27 6 29 953 Algeria 3 175 9 077 35 0 26 565 Angola 3 175 7 921 40 1 12 934 Equatorial Guinea 3 057 9 398 32 5 695 Honduras 2 887 10 675 27 0 5 417 Russia 2 739 19 997 13 7 112 039 Maldives 2 702 6 808 39 7 308 Turkey 2 677 18 555 14 4 54 411 Paraguay 2 589 9 075 28 5 4 181 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 2 547 10 882 23 4 75 Jamaica 2 507 8 924 28 1 1 983 Morocco 2 426 9 305 26 1 23 218 Sri Lanka 2 415 5 758 41 9 14 311 Vanuatu 2 346 5 355 43 8 152 Belize 2 298 8 961 25 6 221 Djibouti 2 123 5 389 39 4 569 Papua New Guinea 2 117 6 254 33 9 4 488 Bolivia 2 111 7 306 28 9 6 530 Philippines 1 915 8 349 22 9 62 043 Iran 1 899 4 779 39 7 57 018 Vietnam 1 806 4 560 39 6 67 300 Kyrgyzstan 1 797 4 200 42 8 3 668 Pakistan 1 711 3 816 44 8 110 625 Indonesia 1 597 8 919 17 9 170 221 Laos 1 567 5 215 30 1 3 946 Eritrea 1 499 3 412 43 9 2 462 Guyana 1 454 4 620 31 5 475 Eswatini 1 388 4 219 32 9 719 Cambodia 1 365 3 404 40 1 9 598 Zimbabwe 1 317 3 216 41 0 8 103 Sao Tome and Principe 1 311 2 987 43 9 96 East Timor 1 303 2 513 51 9 584 India 1 289 7 024 18 4 850 210 Senegal 1 270 3 077 41 3 7 525 Benin 1 237 2 972 41 6 5 300 Republic of the Congo 1 219 3 361 36 3 2 546 Suriname 1 147 5 198 22 1 368 Ivory Coast 1 119 2 958 37 8 11 501 Thailand 1 085 9 969 10 9 52 639 Nicaragua 1 054 3 721 28 3 3 858 Bangladesh 1 006 2 332 43 1 102 793 Comoros 971 2 729 35 6 412 Togo 917 2 324 39 5 3 800 Cameroon 897 2 282 39 3 11 413 Kenya 880 2 306 38 2 24 546 Lesotho 857 2 640 32 5 1 208 Nepal 834 2 054 40 6 17 150 Mauritania 764 1 756 43 5 2 239 Belarus 740 1 514 48 9 7 427 Myanmar 739 1 515 48 8 34 334 Haiti 619 2 472 25 0 6 300 Tajikistan 618 1 364 45 3 4 995 Yemen 594 1 967 30 2 14 122 Burkina Faso 569 1 317 43 2 8 571 Syria 500 1 190 42 0 9 477 Mali 468 1 094 42 8 7 834 Liberia 410 1 015 40 4 2 279 Ghana 398 934 42 6 14 972 Zambia 390 1 197 32 6 7 641 Tanzania 383 865 44 3 25 944 Niger 379 863 43 9 8 579 Egypt 346 3 717 9 3 57 160 Central African Republic 332 960 34 6 2 132 Gambia 327 889 36 8 936 Guinea 323 816 39 6 6 077 Guinea Bissau 296 701 42 2 909 Chad 294 735 40 0 6 319 Afghanistan 290 643 45 1 16 245 Uganda 287 710 40 4 17 941 Rwanda 254 660 38 5 6 123 Sudan 231 530 43 6 19 846 Nigeria 208 1 572 13 2 88 264 Mozambique 201 482 41 7 13 360 Madagascar 179 432 41 4 12 471 Sierra Leone 153 355 43 1 3 596 Kazakhstan 1 520 5 122 29 7 12 086 Burundi 142 321 44 2 4 972 DR Congo 123 331 37 2 35 869 Ethiopia 78 167 46 7 51 036 Malawi 54 141 38 3 8 493 Ukraine 430 3 964 10 9 35 267Income distribution within individual countries Edit Main articles List of countries by income equality and Income distribution Countries income inequality according to their most recent reported Gini index values as of 2018 1 Income inequality is measured by Gini coefficient expressed in percent that is a number between 0 and 1 Here 0 expresses perfect equality meaning that everyone has the same income whereas 1 represents perfect inequality meaning that one person has all the income and others have none A Gini index value above 50 is considered high countries including Brazil Colombia South Africa Botswana and Honduras can be found in this category A Gini index value of 30 or above is considered medium countries including Vietnam Mexico Poland the United States Argentina Russia and Uruguay can be found in this category A Gini index value lower than 30 is considered low countries including Austria Germany Denmark Norway Slovenia Sweden and Ukraine can be found in this category 51 In the low income inequality category below 30 is a wide representation of countries previously being part of Soviet Union or its satellites like Slovakia Czech Republic Ukraine and Hungary In 2012 the Gini index for income inequality for whole European Union was only 30 6 Income distribution can differ from wealth distribution within each country The wealth inequality is also measured in Gini index There the higher Gini index signify greater inequality within the wealth distribution in country 0 means total wealth equality and 1 represents situation where everyone has no wealth except an individual that has everything For instance countries like Denmark Norway and Netherlands all belonging to the last category below 30 low income inequality also have very high Gini index in wealth distribution ranging from 70 up to 90 Consumption distribution within individual countries Edit Main article Consumption distribution In economics the consumption distribution or consumption inequality is an alternative to the income distribution or wealth distribution for judging economic inequality comparing levels of consumption rather than income or wealth 52 This is an important measure of inequality as the basic utility of the wealth or income is the expenditure 53 People experience the inequality directly in consumption rather than income or wealth 54 Factors proposed to affect economic inequality EditThere are various reasons for economic inequality within societies including both global market functions such as trade development and regulation as well as social factors including gender race and education 55 Recent growth in overall income inequality at least within the OECD countries has been driven mostly by increasing inequality in wages and salaries 15 Economist Thomas Piketty argues that widening economic disparity is an inevitable phenomenon of free market capitalism when the rate of return of capital r is greater than the rate of growth of the economy g 56 Labour market Edit Main articles Labour economics Capitalism Marxism and Neoclassical economics In modern market economies if competition is imperfect information unevenly distributed opportunities to acquire education and skills unequal market failure results Many such imperfect conditions exist in virtually every market According to Joseph Stiglitz this means that there is an enormous potential role for government to correct such market failures 57 In the United States real wages are flat over the past 40 years for occupations across income and education levels e g auto mechanics cashiers doctors and software engineers 58 However stock ownership favors higher income and education levels 59 thereby resulting in disparate investment income Taxes Edit Main articles Income tax and Progressive tax Another cause is the rate at which income is taxed coupled with the progressivity of the tax system A progressive tax is a tax by which the tax rate increases as the taxable base amount increases 60 61 62 63 64 In a progressive tax system the level of the top tax rate will often have a direct impact on the level of inequality within a society either increasing it or decreasing it provided that income does not change as a result of the change in tax regime Additionally steeper tax progressivity applied to social spending can result in a more equal distribution of income across the board 65 Tax credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit in the US can also decrease income inequality 66 The difference between the Gini index for an income distribution before taxation and the Gini index after taxation is an indicator for the effects of such taxation 67 Education Edit Main article Education Illustration from a 1916 advertisement for a vocational school in the back of a US magazine Education has been seen as a key to higher income and this advertisement appealed to Americans belief in the possibility of self betterment as well as threatening the consequences of downward mobility in the great income inequality existing during the Industrial Revolution An important factor in the creation of inequality is variation in individuals access to education 68 Education especially in an area where there is a high demand for workers creates high wages for those with this education 69 However increases in education first increase and then decrease growth as well as income inequality As a result those who are unable to afford an education or choose not to pursue optional education generally receive much lower wages The justification for this is that a lack of education leads directly to lower incomes and thus lower aggregate saving and investment Conversely quality education raises incomes and promotes growth because it helps to unleash the productive potential of the poor 70 Access to education was in turn influenced by land inequalities In the less industrialized parts of 19th century Europe for example landowners still held more political power than industrialists These landowners did not benefit from educating their workers as much as industrialists did since educated workers have more incentives to migrate to urban industrial areas than their less educated counterparts 71 Consequently lower incentives to promote education in regions where land inequality was high led to lower levels of numeracy in these regions 71 Economic liberalism deregulation and decline of unions Edit Main articles Economic liberalism Deregulation and Labor unions in the United States John Schmitt and Ben Zipperer 2006 of the CEPR point to economic liberalism and the reduction of business regulation along with the decline of union membership as one of the causes of economic inequality In an analysis of the effects of intensive Anglo American liberal policies in comparison to continental European liberalism where unions have remained strong they concluded The U S economic and social model is associated with substantial levels of social exclusion including high levels of income inequality high relative and absolute poverty rates poor and unequal educational outcomes poor health outcomes and high rates of crime and incarceration At the same time the available evidence provides little support for the view that U S style labor market flexibility dramatically improves labor market outcomes Despite popular prejudices to the contrary the U S economy consistently affords a lower level of economic mobility than all the continental European countries for which data is available 72 More recently the International Monetary Fund has published studies which found that the decline of unionization in many advanced economies and the establishment of neoliberal economics have fueled rising income inequality 73 74 Information technology Edit Main articles Digital Revolution and Information Technology The growth in importance of information technology has been credited with increasing income inequality 75 Technology has been called the main driver of the recent increases in inequality by Erik Brynjolfsson of MIT 76 In arguing against this explanation Jonathan Rothwell notes that if technological advancement is measured by high rates of invention there is a negative correlation between it and inequality Countries with high invention rates as measured by patent applications filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty exhibit lower inequality than those with less In one country the United States salaries of engineers and software developers rarely reach above 390 000 year the lower limit for the top 1 earners 77 Some researchers such as Juliet B Schor highlight the role of for profit online sharing economy platforms as an accelerator of income inequality and calls into question their supposed contribution in empowering outsiders of the labour market 78 Taking the example of TaskRabbit a labour service platform she shows that a large proportion of providers already have a stable full time job and participate part time in the platform as an opportunity to increase their income by diversifying their activities outside employment which tends to restrict the volume of work remaining for the minority of platform workers In addition there is an important phenomenon of labour substitution as manual tasks traditionally performed by workers without a degree or just a college degree integrated into the labour market in the traditional economy sectors are now performed by workers with a high level of education in 2013 70 of TaskRabbit s workforce held a bachelor s degree 20 a master s degree and 5 a PhD 79 The development of platforms which are increasingly capturing demand for these manual services at the expense of non platform companies may therefore benefit mainly skilled workers who are offered more earning opportunities that can be used as supplemental or transitional work during periods of unemployment It has also been proposed that information technologies contribute to winner take most market concentration reducing the need for labor across competing suppliers 80 Market concentration drives down labor s share of the GDP increasing the wealth of capital and thereby exacerbating inequality Economists have linked automation to increases in economic inequality as automation raises the returns to wealth and contributes to stagnating wages at the lower end of the wage distribution 81 Globalization Edit Main articles Globalization and International inequality Elephant curve Change in real income between 1988 and 2008 at various income percentiles of global income distribution 82 Trade liberalization may shift economic inequality from a global to a domestic scale 83 When rich countries trade with poor countries the low skilled workers in the rich countries may see reduced wages as a result of the competition while low skilled workers in the poor countries may see increased wages Trade economist Paul Krugman estimates that trade liberalisation has had a measurable effect on the rising inequality in the United States He attributes this trend to increased trade with poor countries and the fragmentation of the means of production resulting in low skilled jobs becoming more tradeable 84 Anthropologist Jason Hickel contends that globalization and structural adjustment set off the race to the bottom a significant driver of surging global inequality Another driver Hickel mentions is the debt system which advanced the need for structural adjustment in the first place 85 Gender Edit Main article Gender inequality The gender gap in median earnings of full time employees according to the OECD 2015 86 In many countries there is a gender pay gap in favor of males in the labor market Several factors other than discrimination contribute to this gap On average women are more likely than men to consider factors other than pay when looking for work and may be less willing to travel or relocate 87 88 Thomas Sowell in his book Knowledge and Decisions claims that this difference is due to women not taking jobs due to marriage or pregnancy A U S Census s report stated that in US once other factors are accounted for there is still a difference in earnings between women and men 89 A study done on three post soviet countries Armenia Georgia and Azerbaijan reveals that gender is one of the driving forces of income inequality and being a female have significant negative effect on income when other factors are held equal The results show more than 50 gender pay gap in all three countries 90 These findings are because usually employers tend to avoid hiring women because of possible maternity leave Other reason for this can be occupational segregation which implies that women are usually accumulated in lower paid positions and sectors such as social services and education Race Edit Main article Social inequalityThere is also a globally recognized disparity in the wealth income and economic welfare of people of different races In many nations data exists to suggest that members of certain racial demographics experience lower wages fewer opportunities for career and educational advancement and intergenerational wealth gaps 91 Studies have uncovered the emergence of what is called ethnic capital by which people belonging to a race that has experienced discrimination are born into a disadvantaged family from the beginning and therefore have less resources and opportunities at their disposal 92 93 The universal lack of education technical and cognitive skills and inheritable wealth within a particular race is often passed down between generations compounding in effect to make escaping these racialized cycles of poverty increasingly difficult 93 Additionally ethnic groups that experience significant disparities are often also minorities at least in representation though often in number as well in the nations where they experience the harshest disadvantage As a result they are often segregated either by government policy or social stratification leading to ethnic communities that experience widespread gaps in wealth and aid 94 As a general rule races which have been historically and systematically colonized typically indigenous ethnicities continue to experience lower levels of financial stability in the present day The global South is considered to be particularly victimized by this phenomenon though the exact socioeconomic manifestations change across different regions 91 Westernized Nations Edit Even in economically developed societies with high levels of modernization such as may be found in Western Europe North America and Australia minority ethnic groups and immigrant populations in particular experience financial discrimination citation needed While the progression of civil rights movements and justice reform has improved access to education and other economic opportunities in politically advanced nations racial income and wealth disparity still prove significant 95 In the United States for example a survey when of African American populations show that they are more likely to drop out of high school and college are typically employed for fewer hours at lower wages have lower than average intergenerational wealth and are more likely to use welfare as young adults than their white counterparts 96 Mexican Americans while suffering less debilitating socioeconomic factors than black Americans experience deficiencies in the same areas when compared to whites and have not assimilated financially to the level of stability experienced by white Americans as a whole 97 These experiences are the effects of the measured disparity due to race in countries like the US where studies show that in comparison to whites blacks suffer from drastically lower levels of upward mobility higher levels of downward mobility and poverty that is more easily transmitted to offspring as a result of the disadvantage stemming from the era of slavery and post slavery racism that has been passed through racial generations to the present 98 99 100 These are lasting financial inequalities that apply in varying magnitudes to most non white populations in nations such as the US the UK France Spain Australia etc 91 Latin America Edit In the countries of the Caribbean Central America and South America many ethnicities continue to deal with the effects of European colonization and in general nonwhites tend to be noticeably poorer than whites in this region In many countries with significant populations of indigenous races and those of Afro descent such as Mexico Colombia Chile etc income levels can be roughly half as high as those experiences by white demographics and this inequity is accompanied by systematically unequal access to education career opportunities and poverty relief This region of the world apart from urbanizing areas like Brazil and Costa Rica continues to be understudied and often the racial disparity is denied by Latin Americans who consider themselves to be living in post racial and post colonial societies far removed from intense social and economic stratification despite the evidence to the contrary 101 Africa Edit African countries too continue to deal with the effects of the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade which set back economic development as a whole for blacks of African citizenship more than any other region The degree to which colonizers stratified their holdings on the continent on the basis of race has had a direct correlation in the magnitude of disparity experienced by nonwhites in the nations that eventually rose from their colonial status Former French colonies for example see much higher rates of income inequality between whites and nonwhites as a result of the rigid hierarchy imposed by the French who lived in Africa at the time 102 Another example is found in South Africa which still reeling from the socioeconomic impacts of Apartheid experiences some of the highest racial income and wealth inequality in all of Africa 98 In these and other countries like Nigeria Zimbabwe and Sierra Leone movements of civil reform have initially led to improved access to financial advancement opportunities but data when shows that for nonwhites this progress is either stalling or erasing itself in the newest generation of blacks that seek education and improved transgenerational wealth The economic status of one s parents continues to define and predict the financial futures of African and minority ethnic groups 103 needs update Asia Edit Asian regions and countries such as China the Middle East and Central Asia have been vastly understudied in terms of racial disparity but even here the effects of Western colonization provide similar results to those found in other parts of the globe 91 Additionally cultural and historical practices such as the caste system in India leave their marks as well While the disparity is greatly improving in the case of India there still exists social stratification between peoples of lighter and darker skin tones that cumulatively result in income and wealth inequality manifesting in many of the same poverty traps seen elsewhere 104 Economic development Edit A Kuznets curve Main article Kuznets curve Economist Simon Kuznets argued that levels of economic inequality are in large part the result of stages of development According to Kuznets countries with low levels of development have relatively equal distributions of wealth As a country develops it acquires more capital which leads to the owners of this capital having more wealth and income and introducing inequality Eventually through various possible redistribution mechanisms such as social welfare programs more developed countries move back to lower levels of inequality 105 Wealth concentration Edit Main articles Wealth concentration Billionaire and Oligarchy As of 2022 Elon Musk is the richest person in the world Wealth concentration is the process by which under certain conditions newly created wealth concentrates in the possession of already wealthy individuals or entities Accordingly those who already hold wealth have the means to invest in new sources of creating wealth or to otherwise leverage the accumulation of wealth and thus they are the beneficiaries of the new wealth Over time wealth concentration can significantly contribute to the persistence of inequality within society Thomas Piketty in his book Capital in the Twenty First Century argues that the fundamental force for divergence is the usually greater return of capital r than economic growth g and that larger fortunes generate higher returns 106 Rent seeking Edit Main article Rent seeking Economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that rather than explaining concentrations of wealth and income market forces should serve as a brake on such concentration which may better be explained by the non market force known as rent seeking or unjust enrichment While the market will bid up compensation for rare and desired skills to reward wealth creation greater productivity etc it will also prevent successful entrepreneurs from earning excess profits by fostering competition to cut prices profits and large compensation 107 A better explainer of growing inequality according to Stiglitz is the use of political power generated by wealth by certain groups to shape government policies financially beneficial to them This process known to economists as rent seeking brings income not from creation of wealth but from grabbing a larger share of the wealth that would otherwise have been produced without their effort 108 Finance industry Edit Jamie Galbraith argues that countries with larger financial sectors have greater inequality and the link is not an accident 109 110 why Global warming Edit A 2019 study published in PNAS found that global warming plays a role in increasing economic inequality between countries boosting economic growth in developed countries while hampering such growth in developing nations of the Global South The study says that 25 of gap between the developed world and the developing world can be attributed to global warming 111 A 2020 report by Oxfam and the Stockholm Environment Institute says that the wealthiest 10 of the global population were responsible for more than half of global carbon dioxide emissions from 1990 to 2015 which increased by 60 112 According to a 2020 report by the UNEP overconsumption by the rich is a significant driver of the climate crisis and the wealthiest 1 of the world s population are responsible for more than double the greenhouse gas emissions of the poorest 50 combined Inger Andersen in the foreword to the report said this elite will need to reduce their footprint by a factor of 30 to stay in line with the Paris Agreement targets 113 A 2022 report by Oxfam found that the business investments of the wealthiest 125 billionaires emit 393 million metric tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions annually 114 Politics Edit Joseph Stiglitz argues in The Price of Inequality 2012 that the economic inequality is inevitable and permanent because it is caused by the great amount of political power the richest have 57 He wrote While there may be underlying economic forces at play politics have shaped the market and shaped it in ways that advantage the top at the expense of the rest Mitigating factors Edit Data shows substantial social segregation correlating with economic income groups 115 However social connectedness to people of higher income levels is a strong predictor of upward income mobility 115 Countries with a left leaning legislature generally have lower levels of inequality 116 117 Many factors constrain economic inequality they may be divided into two classes government sponsored and market driven The relative merits and effectiveness of each approach is a subject of debate Typical government initiatives to reduce economic inequality include Public education increasing the supply of skilled labor and reducing income inequality due to education differentials 118 Progressive taxation the rich are taxed proportionally more than the poor reducing the amount of income inequality in society if the change in taxation does not cause changes in income 119 Market forces outside of government intervention that can reduce economic inequality include propensity to spend with rising wealth amp income a person may spend more In an extreme example if one person owned everything they would immediately need to hire people to maintain their properties thus reducing the wealth concentration 120 On the other hand high income persons have higher propensity to save 121 Robin Maialeh then shows that increasing economic wealth decreases propensity to spend and increases propensity to invest which consequently leads to even greater growth rate of already rich agents 122 Research shows that since 1300 the only periods with significant declines in wealth inequality in Europe were the Black Death and the two World Wars 123 Historian Walter Scheidel posits that since the Stone Age only extreme violence catastrophes and upheaval in the form of total war Communist revolution pestilence and state collapse have significantly reduced inequality 124 125 He has stated that only all out thermonuclear war might fundamentally reset the existing distribution of resources and that peaceful policy reform may well prove unequal to the growing challenges ahead 126 127 Policy responses intended to mitigate Edit A 2011 OECD study makes a number of suggestions to its member countries including 16 Well targeted income support policies Facilitation and encouragement of access to employment Better job related training and education for the low skilled on the job training would help to boost their productivity potential and future earnings Better access to formal education Progressive taxation reduces absolute income inequality when the higher rates on higher income individuals are paid and not evaded and transfer payments and social safety nets result in progressive government spending 128 129 130 Wage ratio legislation has also been proposed as a means of reducing income inequality The OECD asserts that public spending is vital in reducing the ever expanding wealth gap 131 Deferred investment programs that increase stock ownership amongst lower income levels can supplement income to compensate wage stagnation 58 The economists Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty recommend much higher top marginal tax rates on the wealthy up to 50 percent 70 percent or even 90 percent 132 Ralph Nader Jeffrey Sachs the United Front Against Austerity among others call for a financial transaction tax also known as the Robin Hood tax to bolster the social safety net and the public sector 133 134 The Economist wrote in December 2013 A minimum wage providing it is not set too high could thus boost pay with no ill effects on jobs America s federal minimum wage at 38 of median income is one of the rich world s lowest Some studies find no harm to employment from federal or state minimum wages others see a small one but none finds any serious damage 135 General limitations on and taxation of rent seeking are popular across the political spectrum 136 Public policy responses addressing causes and effects of income inequality in the US include progressive tax incidence adjustments strengthening social safety net provisions such as Aid to Families with Dependent Children welfare the food stamp program Social Security Medicare and Medicaid organizing community interest groups increasing and reforming higher education subsidies increasing infrastructure spending and placing limits on and taxing rent seeking 137 A 2017 study in the Journal of Political Economy by Daron Acemoglu James Robinson and Thierry Verdier argues that American cutthroat capitalism and inequality gives rise to technology and innovation that more cuddly forms of capitalism cannot 138 As a result the diversity of institutions we observe among relatively advanced countries ranging from greater inequality and risk taking in the United States to the more egalitarian societies supported by a strong safety net in Scandinavia rather than reflecting differences in fundamentals between the citizens of these societies may emerge as a mutually self reinforcing world equilibrium If so in this equilibrium we cannot all be like the Scandinavians because Scandinavian capitalism depends in part on the knowledge spillovers created by the more cutthroat American capitalism 138 A 2012 working paper by the same authors making similar arguments was challenged by Lane Kenworthy who posited that among other things the Nordic countries are consistently ranked as some of the world s most innovative countries by the World Economic Forum s Global Competitiveness Index with Sweden ranking as the most innovative nation followed by Finland for 2012 2013 the U S ranked sixth 139 There are however global initiative like the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 10 which aims to garner international efforts in reducing economic inequality considerably by 2030 140 Effects EditMain article Effects of economic inequality A lot of research has been done about the effects of economic inequality on different aspects in society Health For long time the higher material living standards lead to longer life as those people were able to get enough food water and access to warmth British researchers Richard G Wilkinson and Kate Pickett have found higher rates of health and social problems obesity mental illness homicides teenage births incarceration child conflict drug use in countries and states with higher inequality 141 142 Their research included 24 developed countries including most U S states and found that in the more developed countries such as Finland and Japan the heath issues are much lower than in states with rather higher inequality rates such as Utah and New Hampshire Some studies link a surge in deaths of despair suicide drug overdoses and alcohol related deaths to widening income inequality 143 144 Conversely other research did not find these effects or concluded that research suffered from issues of confounding variables 145 Social goods British researchers Richard G Wilkinson and Kate Pickett have found lower rates of social goods life expectancy by country educational performance trust among strangers women s status social mobility even numbers of patents issued in countries and states with higher inequality 141 142 Social cohesion Research has shown an inverse link between income inequality and social cohesion In more equal societies people are much more likely to trust each other measures of social capital the benefits of goodwill fellowship mutual sympathy and social connectedness among groups who make up a social units suggest greater community involvement Crime The cross national research shows that in societies with less economic inequality the homicide rates are consistently lower 146 A 2016 study finds that interregional inequality increases terrorism 147 Other research has argued inequality has little effect on crime rates 148 149 Welfare Studies have found evidence that in societies where inequality is lower population wide satisfaction and happiness tend to be higher 150 151 152 153 Poverty Study made by Jared Bernstein and Elise Gould suggest that the poverty in the United States could have been reduced by the lowering of economic inequality for the past few decades 154 155 Debt Income inequality has been the driving factor in the growing household debt 156 157 as high earners bid up the price of real estate and middle income earners go deeper into debt trying to maintain what once was a middle class lifestyle 158 Economic growth A 2016 meta analysis found that the effect of inequality on growth is negative and more pronounced in less developed countries than in rich countries though the average impact on growth was not significant The study also found that wealth inequality is more pernicious to growth than income inequality 13 Civic participation Higher income inequality led to less of all forms of social cultural and civic participation among the less wealthy 159 Political instability Studies indicate that economic inequality leads to greater political instability including an increased risk of democratic breakdown 11 160 161 162 163 and civil conflict 164 12 A significant impact of inequality on civil war probability has been found through anthropometric methods 165 Political party responses One study finds that economic inequality prompts attempts by left leaning politicians to pursue redistributive policies while right leaning politicians seek to repress the redistributive policies 166 Perspectives EditFairness vs equality Edit According to Christina Starmans et al Nature Hum Beh 2017 the research literature contains no evidence on people having an aversion on inequality In all studies analyzed the subjects preferred fair distributions inequity aversion to equal distributions in both laboratory and real world situations In public researchers may loosely speak of equality instead of fairness when referring to studies where fairness happens to coincide with equality but in many studies fairness is carefully separated from equality and the results are univocal Very young children seem to prefer fairness over equality 167 When people were asked what would be the wealth of each quintile in their ideal society they gave a 50 fold sum to the richest quintile than to the poorest quintile The preference for inequality increases in adolescence and so do the capabilities to favor fortune effort and ability in the distribution 167 Preference for unequal distribution has been developed to the human race possibly because it allows for better co operation and allows a person to work with a more productive person so that both parties benefit from the co operation Inequality is also said to be able to solve the problems of free riders cheaters and ill behaving people although this is heavily debated 167 Researches demonstrate that people usually underestimate the level of actual inequality which is also much higher than their desired level of inequality 168 In many societies such as the USSR the distribution led to protests from wealthier landowners 169 In the current U S many feel that the distribution is unfair in being too unequal In both cases the cause is unfairness not inequality the researchers conclude 167 Socialist perspectives Edit Socialists attribute the vast disparities in wealth to the private ownership of the means of production by a class of owners creating a situation where a small portion of the population lives off unearned property income by virtue of ownership titles in capital equipment financial assets and corporate stock By contrast the vast majority of the population is dependent on income in the form of a wage or salary In order to rectify this situation socialists argue that the means of production should be socially owned so that income differentials would be reflective of individual contributions to the social product 170 Marxian economics attributes rising inequality to job automation and capital deepening within capitalism The process of job automation conflicts with the capitalist property form and its attendant system of wage labor In this analysis capitalist firms increasingly substitute capital equipment for labor inputs workers under competitive pressure to reduce costs and maximize profits Over the long term this trend increases the organic composition of capital meaning that less workers are required in proportion to capital inputs increasing unemployment the reserve army of labour This process exerts a downward pressure on wages The substitution of capital equipment for labor mechanization and automation raises the productivity of each worker resulting in a situation of relatively stagnant wages for the working class amidst rising levels of property income for the capitalist class 171 Marxist socialists ultimately predict the emergence of a communist society based on the common ownership of the means of production where each individual citizen would have free access to the articles of consumption From each according to his ability to each according to his need According to Marxist philosophy equality in the sense of free access is essential for freeing individuals from dependent relationships thereby allowing them to transcend alienation 172 Meritocracy Edit Meritocracy favors an eventual society where an individual s success is a direct function of his merit or contribution Economic inequality would be a natural consequence of the wide range in individual skill talent and effort in human population David Landes stated that the progression of Western economic development that led to the Industrial Revolution was facilitated by men advancing through their own merit rather than because of family or political connections 173 Liberal perspectives Edit Most modern social liberals including centrist or left of center political groups believe that the capitalist economic system should be fundamentally preserved but the status quo regarding the income gap must be reformed Social liberals favor a capitalist system with active Keynesian macroeconomic policies and progressive taxation to even out differences in income inequality Research indicates that people who hold liberal beliefs tend to see greater income inequality as morally wrong 174 However contemporary classical liberals and libertarians generally do not take a stance on wealth inequality but believe in equality under the law regardless of whether it leads to unequal wealth distribution In 1966 Ludwig von Mises a prominent figure in the Austrian School of economic thought explains The liberal champions of equality under the law were fully aware of the fact that men are born unequal and that it is precisely their inequality that generates social cooperation and civilization Equality under the law was in their opinion not designed to correct the inexorable facts of the universe and to make natural inequality disappear It was on the contrary the device to secure for the whole of mankind the maximum of benefits it can derive from it Henceforth no man made institutions should prevent a man from attaining that station in which he can best serve his fellow citizens Robert Nozick argued that government redistributes wealth by force usually in the form of taxation and that the ideal moral society would be one where all individuals are free from force However Nozick recognized that some modern economic inequalities were the result of forceful taking of property and a certain amount of redistribution would be justified to compensate for this force but not because of the inequalities themselves 175 John Rawls argued in A Theory of Justice 176 that inequalities in the distribution of wealth are only justified when they improve society as a whole including the poorest members Rawls does not discuss the full implications of his theory of justice Some see Rawls s argument as a justification for capitalism since even the poorest members of society theoretically benefit from increased innovations under capitalism others believe only a strong welfare state can satisfy Rawls s theory of justice 177 Classical liberal Milton Friedman believed that if government action is taken in pursuit of economic equality then political freedom would suffer In a famous quote he said A society that puts equality before freedom will get neither A society that puts freedom before equality will get a high degree of both Economist Tyler Cowen has argued that though income inequality has increased within nations globally it has fallen over the 20 years leading up to 2014 He argues that though income inequality may make individual nations worse off overall the world has improved as global inequality has been reduced 178 Social justice arguments Edit Patrick Diamond and Anthony Giddens professors of Economics and Sociology respectively hold that pure meritocracy is incoherent because without redistribution one generation s successful individuals would become the next generation s embedded caste hoarding the wealth they had accumulated 179 They also state that social justice requires redistribution of high incomes and large concentrations of wealth in a way that spreads it more widely in order to recognize the contribution made by all sections of the community to building the nation s wealth Patrick Diamond and Anthony Giddens June 27 2005 New Statesman 180 Pope Francis stated in his Evangelii gaudium that as long as the problems of the poor are not radically resolved by rejecting the absolute autonomy of markets and financial speculation and by attacking the structural causes of inequality no solution will be found for the world s problems or for that matter to any problems 181 He later declared that inequality is the root of social evil 182 When income inequality is low aggregate demand will be relatively high because more people who want ordinary consumer goods and services will be able to afford them while the labor force will not be as relatively monopolized by the wealthy 183 Effects on social welfare Edit In most western democracies the desire to eliminate or reduce economic inequality is generally associated with the political left One practical argument in favor of reduction is the idea that economic inequality reduces social cohesion and increases social unrest thereby weakening the society There is evidence that this is true see inequity aversion and it is intuitive at least for small face to face groups of people 184 Alberto Alesina Rafael Di Tella and Robert MacCulloch find that inequality negatively affects happiness in Europe but not in the United States 185 It has also been argued that economic inequality invariably translates to political inequality which further aggravates the problem Even in cases where an increase in economic inequality makes nobody economically poorer an increased inequality of resources is disadvantageous as increased economic inequality can lead to a power shift due to an increased inequality in the ability to participate in democratic processes 186 Capabilities approach Edit Further information Capability approach The capabilities approach sometimes called the human development approach looks at income inequality and poverty as form of capability deprivation 187 Unlike neoliberalism which defines well being as utility maximization economic growth and income are considered a means to an end rather than the end itself 188 Its goal is to wid en people s choices and the level of their achieved well being 189 through increasing functioning the things a person values doing capabilities the freedom to enjoy functionings and agency the ability to pursue valued goals 190 When a person s capabilities are lowered they are in some way deprived of earning as much income as they would otherwise An old ill man cannot earn as much as a healthy young man gender roles and customs may prevent a woman from receiving an education or working outside the home There may be an epidemic that causes widespread panic or there could be rampant violence in the area that prevents people from going to work for fear of their lives 187 As a result income inequality increases and it becomes more difficult to reduce the gap without additional aid See also EditAccumulation of capital Anti capitalism Aporophobia Class conflict Criticism of capitalism Cycle of poverty Donor Class Economic anxiety Economic migrant Economic security Equal opportunity Great Divergence disproportionate economic advancement of Europe Human Development Index Income distribution Inequality for All International inequality List of countries by distribution of wealth List of countries by income equality List of countries by wealth per adult Occupy movement Paradise Papers Poverty reduction Public university Rent seeking Social inequality Spatial inequality Tax haven Theories of poverty Wealth concentration Wealth distributionReferences Edit a b GINI index World Bank estimate Data data worldbank org Retrieved July 23 2020 Ventura Luca World Wealth Distribution And Income Inequality 2022 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explained by Robert Alan Dahl in the chapters The Presence of a Market Economy p 63 The Distribution of Political Resources p 84 und Market Capitalism and Human Dispositions p 87 in On Political Equality 2006 120 pages Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300126877 a b Amartya Sen 1999 Poverty as Capability Deprivation Development as Freedom New York Anchor Books Fukuda Parr Sakiko 2003 The Human Development Paradigm Operationalizing Sen s Ideas on Capabilities Feminist Economics 9 2 3 301 17 doi 10 1080 1354570022000077980 S2CID 18178004 UNDP United Nations Development Programme January 1 1990 Human Deuelopment Report 1990 PDF Report Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press Via Human Deuelopment Reports Deneulin Severine Alkire Sabina 2009 The human development and capability approach in Deneulin Severine Shahani Lila eds An introduction to the human development and capability approach freedom and agency Sterling VA amp Ottawa Ontario Earthscan International Development Research Centre pp 22 48 ISBN 978 1844078066Further reading EditBooksAtkinson Anthony B Bourguignon Francois 2000 Handbook of income distribution Amsterdam amp New York Elsevier ISBN 978 0444816313 Atkinson Anthony B 2015 Inequality What Can Be Done Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0674504763 Barro Robert J Sala i Martin Xavier 2003 1995 Economic growth 2nd ed Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0262025539 Deneulin Severine Shahani Lila 2009 An introduction to the human development and capability approach freedom and agency Sterling VA amp Ottawa Ontario Earthscan International Development Research Centre ISBN 978 1844078066 Giddens Anthony Diamond Patrick 2005 The new egalitarianism Cambridge UK amp Malden MA Polity ISBN 978 0745634319 Gilens Martin 2012 Affluence and influence Economic inequality and political power in America Princeton NJ amp New York Princeton University Press Russell Sage Foundation ISBN 978 0691162423 Gradin Carlos Leibbrandt Murray Tarp Finn eds 2021 Inequality In The Developing World WIDER Studies in Development Economics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198863960 Lambert Peter J 2001 The distribution and redistribution of income 3rd ed Manchester NY Manchester University Press Palgrave ISBN 978 0719057328 Lynn Richard Vanhanen Tatu 2002 IQ and the wealth of nations Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 978 0275975104 Merino Noel ed 2016 Income inequality Opposing Viewpoints Series Farmington Hills MI Greenhaven Press ISBN 978 0737775259 Page Benjamin I Jacobs Lawrence R 2009 Class war What Americans really think about economic inequality Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226644554 Ribeiro Marcelo Byrro 2020 Income Distribution Dynamics of Economic Systems An Econophysical Approach Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107092532 Salverda Wiemer Nolan Brian Smeeding Timothy M 2009 The Oxford handbook of economic inequality Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199231379 Schmidtz David 2006 The elements of justice Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521539364 Sen Amartya 1999 Development as Freedom New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198297581 Sen Amartya Foster James E 1997 On economic inequality Radcliffe Lectures Oxford amp New York Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198281931 von Braun Joachim Diaz Bonilla Eugenio 2008 Globalization of food and agriculture and the poor New Delhi Washington D C Oxford University Press International Food Policy Research Institute ISBN 978 0195695281 Wilkinson Richard G 2005 The impact of inequality how to make sick societies healthier London Routledge ISBN 978 0415372695 Wilkinson Richard G Pickett Kate 2009 The spirit level why more equal societies almost always do better London Allen Lane ISBN 978 1846140396 ArticlesAhamed Liaquat September 2 2019 Widening Gyre The rise and fall and rise of economic inequality The New Yorker pp 26 29 T here seems to be some sort of cap on inequality a limit to the economic divisions a country can ultimately cope with Alesina Alberto Di Tella Rafael MacCulloch Robert 2004 Inequality and happiness Are Europeans and Americans different Journal of Public Economics 88 9 10 2009 42 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 203 664 doi 10 1016 j jpubeco 2003 07 006 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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