A
New
Economics Foundation publication,
this article shows that globalisation
is failing the world's poorest as their
share of the benefits of growth plummet,
and accelerating climate change hurts
the poorest most. The report, the first
in nef's series of 'Re-thinking
poverty' reports, reveals that the share
of benefits from global economic growth
reaching the world's poorest people is
actually shrinking while the poorest do
continue to bear an unfair share of the
costs. The report says that the notion
that global economic growth is the only
way of reducing poverty for the world's
poorest people is the self-serving rhetoric
of those who already enjoy the greatest
share of world income. The authors argue
that to achieve real progress we need
to change the way we think about and discuss
economic issues, and break out of the
confines of mainstream economic thinking.
We also need a shift in power relations,
both globally and nationally, to move
power from developed countries, elites
and commercial interests to the majority
of the world's population, the poor.
February 7, 2006. |