Economic growth and social policies have helped pull
millions out of poverty in the developing world. Or have they? The often-heard
narrative is based on data from the World Bank showing a sharp reduction in the
number of people living below $1.25 per day, adjusted for inflation. However,
new research suggests a deeper look into poverty statistics paints a different
picture. While there has been progress in reducing the number of people living
below the poverty line, this has been achieved largely by raising those
considered ultrapoor to just above the poverty line, rather than by boosting
the standard of living of the poor more broadly, according to a paper from
Martin Ravallion, economist at Georgetown University’s Center for Economic
Research.
“There has been very little absolute gain for the poorest,”
Mr. Ravallion writes in a new working paper from the National Bureau of
Economic Research. “Using an absolute approach to identifying the floor, the
increase in the level of the floor seen over the last 30 years or so has been
small—far less than the growth in mean consumption…The bulk of the developing
world’s progress against poverty has been in reducing the number of people
living close to the consumption floor, rather than raising the level of that
floor,” Mr. Ravallion. “Growth in mean consumption has been far more effective
in reducing the incidence of poverty than raising the consumption floor. In
this sense, it can be said that the poorest have indeed been left behind.”
Nothing is more central to the American Dream than equality but
it is all a mirage. Fifty years after President Lyndon B. Johnson declared War
on Poverty it's not just the poor who are falling behind in the new global
economy, according to a new report: "From Poverty to Opportunity: The
Challenge of Building a Great Society." People on the middle-income have
been struggling to maintain the standard of living they once knew. The report
says. "As the economy grew, wages grew at roughly the same rate." That
changed beginning in the 1970s. "Productivity continued to increase and
our economy continued to grow," the report said. "But the new income
created by that growth has gone overwhelmingly to the wealthiest
Americans." While the economy of the state of Massachusetts, for example,
has grown 125 percent during the last five decades, income growth rates have
barely budged. "Today's economy has left behind people who have gone to
school, gotten jobs and done their best to pay their bills," the report
said. "They live in every city or town in the commonwealth. Many of them
struggle to get their lives back on track, only to encounter a hardship and
fall back down."
Between 1979 and 2011 incomes overall in the state grew by
55 percent, according to the report. If the pay had increased by 55 percent for
all workers, income for lower- and middle-class families would be thousands of
dollars higher than they are today, the report said. For example, a person who
earning $13,500 annually in 2011 should have been paid another $6,500 for a
total of $20,000 if he or she had a 55 percent pay increase. "The incomes
of the highest income households would also have grown over those three
decades," the report said, "but they would have grown by the average
rate of 55 percent rather than by the 270 percent income that those incomes
actually grew." In figures comparing wage growth since 1979, the report
said the lowest paid "had almost no real wage growth," those in the
middle "had little wage growth." But the highest paid had wages that
increased by 64 percent once figures were adjusted for inflation.
"Stagnant income at the bottom of the wage spectrum has
meant that Massachusetts has not been able to make significant progress in
eliminating poverty," the report states. "Twenty-five years ago,
close to one in five residents in Massachusetts was poor or near poor ... Today
that number is one in four."
Economist Paul Krugman writes in his New York Times column. “Competition
from emerging-economy exports has surely been a factor depressing wages in
wealthier nations, although probably not the dominant force. More important,
soaring incomes at the top were achieved, in large part, by squeezing those
below: by cutting wages, slashing benefits, crushing unions, and diverting a
rising share of national resources to financial wheeling and dealing.”
He merely confirms what others have already been saying. Federal
Reserve chairwoman Janet L. Yellen in October, speaking at a conference on
inequality at the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston, she put it plainly: “It is no
secret that the past few decades of widening inequality can be summed up as
significant income and wealth gains for those at the very top and stagnant
living standards for the majority.”
Wall Street showered itself with gold in the run-up to the
financial crisis. The Street again struck gold—this time from taxpayers—with
the bailout from the crisis. It was a neat trick to profit so richly both ways,
but Wall Street managed.
In Canada top-paid corporate executives are raking in the
benefits as the country's average workers struggle, a new study by the Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives has found. The
country's top 100 CEOs took home $47,358—an average citizen's yearly salary—in
less than half a day.
The study, Glory Days: CEO Pay in Canada Soaring to
Pre-Recession Highs , analyzed the 2013 earnings of executives of the country's
240 publicly listed corporations, and found that their average compensation
that year was $9.2 million—almost as high as their $10 million average salary
in pre-recession 2007. It is not just pay but the fringe benefits as well. Almost
half of the 100 highest paid CEOs also have stratospheric pensions waiting for
them when they retire. And most also profit handsomely from the dividends paid
on the shares they own in the companies they work for.
As the study notes, it is also 195 times more than the
average Canadian citizen earns in a year and 237 times more than the average
Canadian woman.
Gerald W. Schwartz, CEO of investment firm Onex Corporation took
home more than $87.9 million. Russell Girling, head of TransCanada, received
$8.7 million. And Richard E. Waugh, CEO of the Bank of Nova Scotia, got more
than $11.2 million for a partial year.
Meanwhile in the UK, during the last General Election, David
Cameron stated: “We have absolutely no plans to raise VAT.” Yet less than a
year later, in January 2011, the tax was raised to its current level of 20%. Theannual cost to a couple with children of a single percentage point rise in the
standard rate of VAT is £180 - meaning the 2.5 per cent rise in the tax has
cost an extra £450 a year since it was introduced. This means that these
families have paid an additional £1,800 in VAT since it was raised on January 4
2011.
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