141111, TI, Vicious cycle of money, power and influence leaves the rest of us behind

 

Vicious cycle of money, power and influence leaves the rest of us behind

By Deborah Hardoon on 11 November 2014 in
Accountability, Anti-corruption movement, Civil society, Cost of Corruption, Human rights, Impunity, Lobbying, Measurement and Research, People power, Politics and government, Poverty and development

We live in a world where 1 billion people live in extreme poverty, with less than US$1.25/day. This is the same world where the market for super yachts is booming. The 85 richest people in the world have the same wealth as the poorest 3.5 billion. The gulf between the haves and the have nots is enormous.

In recent decades, poorer countries have been growing faster than richer ones and huge gains have been made in poverty reduction. Yet despite this, the world is just as unequal as it was 30 years ago. This is because the gap between the rich and the poor within countries has been growing, in many cases growing very quickly. In the US and China, Nigeria and Germany, the richest people capturing an ever increasing share of income and wealth are leaving the rest of us behind.

This has not gone unnoticed. Obama has called it the “defining challenge of our time”, the World Economic Forum survey finds that severe income disparities are seen to be the biggest risk to the global economy.

Oxfam has published a report that highlights the damaging consequences of high and rising economic inequality, from weakening growth and slowing poverty reduction to violence and instability. But the report also recognises that this is not inevitable. It details policies that can reverse this trend: better public services that put all citizens on a level playing field, progressive taxation and fair wages.

So why is this not happening? Why are governments not implementing policies that will benefit the majority of citizens and create a more stable and just society? Why is it that our countries seem to work so that the rich get richer almost inevitably, whilst the rest of us get left behind?

Geef een reactie

Het e-mailadres wordt niet gepubliceerd. Vereiste velden zijn gemarkeerd met *

Nieuwsbrief