malcolm fairbrother lecturer in global policy and politics school of geographical sciences

22
The Ambiguous Crisis of Global Economic Inequality: Contradictory National and International Trends? WUN Horizons in Human Geography Seminar Series November 11, 2008 Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol

Upload: hina

Post on 01-Feb-2016

36 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Ambiguous Crisis of Global Economic Inequality: Contradictory National and International Trends? WUN Horizons in Human Geography Seminar Series November 11, 2008. Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

The Ambiguous Crisis ofGlobal Economic Inequality:

Contradictory National and International Trends?

WUN Horizons in Human Geography Seminar SeriesNovember 11, 2008

Malcolm FairbrotherLecturer in Global Policy and Politics

School of Geographical SciencesUniversity of Bristol

Page 2: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Inequality: A Classic Concernin the Social Sciences

• Marxism• sociology• economics• geography?

Page 3: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Inequality:The Left-Leaning Social Science View• pessimistic about reality, optimistic about

theory the rich get richer, the poor get poorer

• even worse: globalisation and neoliberalism a growing/impending crisis of global inequality??

Page 4: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Growing Inequality:Conservative Responses

1. don’t talk about it2. deny it’s a problem (esp. if poverty declining)3. deny it’s occurring4. attribute inequality to laziness/inferiority of the

poor5. deny the possibility of controlling it6. deny the advisability of controlling it7. deny that conservative/neoliberal policies are

causing it

Page 5: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Two Types of Types of Inequality

• First types: desirable things that can be distributed unevenly health, longevity, education, mobility, political

rights, status, wealth, income…

• Second types: axes of social difference ethnicity, gender, religion, citizenship status…

Page 6: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences
Page 7: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Global Income Inequality

• key decomposition (Firebaugh):• within nation inequality

one-third of global income inequality

• between nation inequality two-thirds of global income inequality

Page 8: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences
Page 9: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences
Page 10: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences
Page 11: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Source: NBER, based on tax data

Page 12: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Source: Nielson, Alderson, and Beckfield 2005 (from Luxembourg Income Study data)

Page 13: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Trends in Within-Nation Income Inequality, Mid-1990s to Mid-2000s

(Source: OECD 2008)large increase: Canada, Finland, Germany

small increase: Austria, Denmark, Japan, Norway, Sweden, USA

no change: Australia, Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, New

Zealand, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland small decrease: Greece, Ireland, Netherlands, UK

large decrease: Mexico, Turkey

Page 14: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Trends in Within-Nation Income Inequality, Mid-1980s to Mid-2000s

(Source: OECD 2008)large increase: Finland, New Zealand

small increase: Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, USA

no change: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg,

Mexico, Netherlands, Spain, Turkey, UKsmall decrease: France, Ireland, Spain

large decrease: [none]

Page 15: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Trends in Between-Nation Inequality

• unweighted by population? growing (definitely)

many small, poor countries not growing

• weighted by population? shrinking (probably, a little)

heavily influenced by China and India worldwide rate of absolute poverty declining

Page 16: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Global Income Inequality

• between nations, weighted by population: declining (probably, a little)

• within nations: increasing (definitely, in many but not all)

• overall: hard to tell, but possibly decreasing

Page 17: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Causes of GrowingWithin-Nation Inequality

1. globalisation?2. skill-biased technological change?3. conservative/neoliberal/other policies?

Page 18: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Causes of (Probably) DecreasingBetween-Nation Inequality

• in other words, what’s causing growth in China and India (and some other Asian economies)? globalisation and/or neoliberalism?

Page 19: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Consequences of GrowingWithin-Nation Inequality?

1. more nationalism? (Solt 2008)2. more corruption? (You & Khagram 2005)3. lost biodiversity? (Mikkelson et al. 2007)4. worse health? (Wilkinson & Pickett 2006)5. less political engagement? (Solt 2008)6. less economic development? (Sokoloff &

Engerman; Acemoglu and Robinson; Easterly)

Page 20: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences
Page 21: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Consequences of Changing Between-Nation Inequality?

• ???• what if present trends continue?• do effects of global inequality parallel those

of within-nation inequality?• should we be concerned about weighted or

unweighted global inequality?• growing influence of international media?

Page 22: Malcolm Fairbrother Lecturer in Global Policy and Politics School of Geographical Sciences

Final Thoughts• inequality is worsening… in some ways

probably not a crisis… yet• inequality appears to have a number of

negative effects, but its full consequences are unclear

• its causes are also unclear (though we have some ideas)

• politics matters (even the OECD agrees)