‘The Globalization of Inequality’ — a primer for the layman

Updated 26 May 2017
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‘The Globalization of Inequality’ — a primer for the layman

“The Globalization of Inequality” has just been published in a paperback edition with a new preface by the author. Written by French-born Francois Bourguignon, former director at the Paris School of Economics and chief economist and senior vice president of the World Bank, this book sheds light on the complex role of globalization in the rise of inequality.
The subject of globalization is still a source of discord. Some believe it has brought wealth to emerging nations while others blame it for a surge in inequality in the world over the last 20 years. The title of this book has two meanings, explains Bourguignon: “On the one hand, it is a reference to questions of global inequality. The importance that is given in international economic debates to effectively re-equilibrating standards of living between countries is the clearest sign of this. But the title also resonates with the feeling that a rise in inequalities affects all countries on the planet and is becoming a matter of grave concern.”
According to the World Bank, the number of people living on less than $1.25 a day, the threshold of extreme poverty, was 1.3 billion in 2008 which corresponds to 20 percent of the world population. If we make the same calculation with $2.50 per day, the total number of poor people reaches 3 billion which is equivalent to nearly half of humanity.
However, the remarkable economic development of China, India and emerging countries especially in East Africa since the 2000s has led to a dramatic reduction in inequality and poverty in the world. This economic growth is due to a set of factors including organizational and technological innovations, as well as material factors such as production equipment and infrastructure or non-material factors such as education, job-training and scientific or technical knowhow. The access to the technology and to the markets of the Northern countries has spearheaded the growth of the developing countries in the global South. Furthermore, the increasing volume of South-South trade is also contributing to a sustained growth in that part of the world.
What about inequality within countries? Is it rising? Inequality has strongly increased in the US where the top 10 percent has acquired nearly half of all the gains from growth over a period of 30 years. Income inequality has also taken place in the United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, and Italy and even in the Scandinavian countries reputed for their egalitarianism. This phenomenon is also prevalent in China, India, Indonesia and Bangladesh.
The extraordinary development of information technology has not only transformed the modes of production of goods and services but it has also created a growing need for IT technicians. The author believes that these technological innovations, rather than the income or profit they generate, are to a certain extent responsible for the “explosion of very high incomes” that can be seen all over the world. For example, the development of communications technology has widened the audience for artists. The Italian opera singer Enrico Caruso, thanks to the invention of the record, became an international star. He sold around a million records. A century later, another Italian opera singer, Luciano Pavarotti sold more than 100 million records. In the world of publishing, J.K. Rowling, the author of the Harry Potter books, receives a yearly income $300 million when 90 percent of English language authors earn less than $80,000 annually. The salaries of CEOs are also directly linked to the size of the companies they manage. The heads of the 10 biggest American companies are paid four times as much as the CEOs of smaller companies.
“The question of whether these salaries reflect real talent is open to debate. The argument that enormous salaries of several million of euros or dollars are necessary incentives for CEOs to perform at a higher level seems rather specious…It is also possible that, over time, these practices have become established as new social norms, weakening the link between remuneration and true executive productivity,” writes Bourguignon.
One of the most effective institutional changes was without any doubt the deregulation of markets and the economic liberalization implemented in the US during the Reagan administration and in the United Kingdom by the Margaret Thatcher government. This would later spread to the rest of the world.
Financial liberalization facilitated the allocation of funds, thus improving the efficiency of the economy as a whole and contributed to the development of sectors and businesses that were initially deprived of access to credit.
“Should we conclude from this that financial liberalization, whatever it might be, contributes to income equality? Far from it. The deregulation in question was of a very specific kind and was neither directly related to the development of new financial products nor connected with the explosion in the international mobility of capital,” writes Bourguignon.
The main question is how to maintain the trend toward global equality while curbing the rise in national inequalities. Bourguignon believes that it is not clear whether taxation and current income redistribution is the best way of tackling inequality. In the preface to the paperback edition, he says “there may not be other choices, at least in the short term, if inequality is likely to increase further due to the pressure of automation and artificial intelligence on jobs.” This book warns against protectionism as this will have a negative impact on the global economy and it will also prevent poor and emerging countries from catching up with developed countries. The anti-globalization rhetoric in Europe and the US is largely caused by the flow of migrants.
“It is important to stress in particular, that the evidence that unskilled migrants cause wage inequality among native workers, or increase their levels of unemployment, is weak, contrary to the relentless assertions of the anti-immigration party leaders in advanced countries. It is vital that these facts, and global progress toward development-friendly migration policies are publicly discussed without the debate being hijacked by populist figures.”
Although Francois Bourguignon was rather confident that globalization was leading us to a more unequal world, he now believes that most Asian economies will continue to catch up with the rest of the world.
Incidentally, a few weeks ago, the conspicuous absence of lettuce and zucchini in supermarkets across Britain highlighted the advantages of globalization. Although some might have been tempted by the idea of returning to homegrown spinach and Brussels sprouts and the ubiquitous apple, most people pleaded for the return of a glorious choice of fruit and vegetables. The scarcity of lettuce and courgette was simply due to bad weather in Spain and Italy. However, the global horticulture supply chains are among the marvels of our time and in a matter of a few days lettuces were back in the supermarkets. Efficient transport offers diversity of supply and food security. If Britons can enjoy a healthy salad every day, they should be grateful to the globalization of food.
“The Globalization of Inequality” has been written for the layman and it remains one of the best books on the subject.
life.style@arabnews.com


What We Are Reading Today: Desert Edens

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Updated 30 May 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Desert Edens

  • Lehmann examines some of the most ambitious climate-engineering projects to emerge in the late 19th and early 20th centuries

Author: Philipp Lehmann

From the 1870s to the mid-20th century, European explorers, climatologists, colonial officials, and planners were avidly interested in large-scale projects that might actively alter the climate. Uncovering this history, “Desert Edens” looks at how arid environments and an increasing anxiety about climate in the colonial world shaped this upsurge in ideas about climate engineering.

From notions about the transformation of deserts into forests to Nazi plans to influence the climates of war-torn areas, Philipp Lehmann puts the early climate change debate in its environmental, intellectual, and political context, and considers the ways this legacy reverberates in the present climate crisis.

Lehmann examines some of the most ambitious climate-engineering projects to emerge in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Confronted with the Sahara in the 1870s, the French developed concepts for a flooding project that would lead to the creation of a man-made Sahara Sea.

 

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Becoming Earth’

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Updated 30 May 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Becoming Earth’

  • Surprisingly, as Jabr discusses the disadvantages of human activity leading to environmental crises, he also highlights the importance of humans in improving ecosystems

Author: Ferris Jabr

Published in 2024 and written by Ferris Jabr, “Becoming Earth” talks about how the planet we know and live in started and came to life.

One of the significant thoughts Jabr argues through his book is the idea that billions of years ago, life transformed from a collection of orbiting rocks into what we now know as our cosmic oasis. This process released oxygen into the atmosphere, formed seas and oceans, and shaped rocks into fertile soil.

Through the book, the author also discusses various environmental systems and how they operate. He talks about the roles of microbes in shaping continents, the Amazon rainforest’s self-sustaining rain cycle and the impact of human activities on planetary systems, all connected to other natural events.

Surprisingly, as Jabr discusses the disadvantages of human activity leading to environmental crises, he also highlights the importance of humans in improving ecosystems. Despite the negative impacts people have had on the environment, humanity has expended a great deal of energy to understand and mitigate environmental problems, he argues.

However, the book has received some criticism, with reviewers arguing that Jabr may have conflated his personal perspective on Earth with scientific research and evidence in the process of using metaphors to explain science.

Other reviewers said that a few sections of “Becoming Earth” may need improvement and more in-depth scientific evidence to support the conclusions Jabr makes.

 


What We Are Reading Today: Red Bandit by Mike Guardia

Updated 29 May 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Red Bandit by Mike Guardia

Mike Guardia's "Red Bandit" pulls you into the cockpit of this legendary jet, delivering a visceral, no-holds-barred chronicle of its battlefield legacy, stripping away the myths to reveal the true capabilities — and limits — of Russia’s iconic warbird.

Based on declassified reports, first-hand pilot accounts, and meticulous combat analysis, Red Bandit is more than just a parochial history — it’s a high-stakes, sky-scorching narrative of power, politics, and heart-pounding dogfights.

 


Book Review: ‘A Shining’ by Jon Fosse

Updated 28 May 2025
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Book Review: ‘A Shining’ by Jon Fosse

Jon Fosse, the 2023 Nobel laureate, delivers a masterclass in existential minimalism with “A Shining,” a novella that glimmers with metaphysical unease.

Translated from Norwegian by Damion Searls, this brief but resonant work lingers like a half-remembered dream, inviting readers to grapple with its haunting ambiguity.   

An unnamed man drives into a remote forest, seeking isolation. When his car stalls, he abandons it, lured deeper into the trees by an enigmatic light. What begins as a quest for solitude spirals into a disorienting confrontation with the unknown.

Strange encounters — a flickering figure, disembodied voices, a persistent glow — blur the boundaries of reality. Is the “shining” a divine sign, a mental rupture, or something beyond comprehension? Fosse offers no easy answers.

Fosse’s sparse, rhythmic prose mirrors the protagonist’s fractured psyche. Sentences loop and stutter, mimicking the repetitive chatter of a mind unraveling (“I walked, I walked, I walked”).

Yet, within this austerity lies startling beauty: Descriptions of moss, shadows and cold air ground the surreal in the realm of the sensory.   

The novella probes humanity’s existential contradictions, particularly the tension between our desire for solitude and our terror of abandonment.

It lays bare the futility of seeking meaning in a universe indifferent to human struggles, while questioning how much we can trust our perceptions.

Are the protagonist’s encounters real, or projections of a mind teetering on the brink of collapse? Fosse leaves readers suspended in that uncertainty.  

Fosse refuses to cater to conventional narrative appetites. There are no villains or heroic arcs, only a man wrestling with the void within.

Fans of Franz Kafka’s existential labyrinths or Samuel Beckett’s bleak humor will find kinship here. 

“A Shining” is not for readers craving action or closure. It is a quiet storm of a book, best absorbed in one sitting under dim light.

Perfect for lovers of philosophical fiction, poetry devotees, and anyone who has ever stared into darkness and wondered what stared back.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’

Updated 27 May 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’

Authors: Asier Larramendi and Marco P. Ferretti

Today, only three species of elephants survive — the African savanna elephant, the African forest elephant, and the Asian elephant. However, these modern giants represent just a fraction of the vast and diverse order of Proboscidea, which includes not only living elephants but also their many extinct relatives.

Over the past 60 million years, proboscideans have evolved and adapted across five continents, giving rise to an astonishing variety of forms, from the massive, woolly-coated mammoths of the Ice Age to the diminutive, island-dwelling dwarf elephants.