We have reached a crossroads in our history. For all the achievements and riches of our time, the world has never been so unequal or more unjust. A century ago, at the time of the First World War, the richest 20% of the world’s population earned eleven times more than the poorest 20%.1 By the end of the twentieth century they earned seventy-four times as much.
Measured in terms of wealth, rather than income, the picture is even more extreme. Globally, the richest 1% now own nearly half of all the world’s wealth. The poorest 50% of the world, by contrast—fully 3 billion people—own less than 1% of its wealth.2
There is growing awareness today of the consequences in rich countries of rising inequality: we know what it means to talk of the 1% there. But when it comes to the much greater gaps between rich and poor the world over, we confine ourselves still to talk of “global poverty”. How often are we told that, if only we could see what life is like in a cramped slum in Dhaka or on some scrabble of land in rural Chad, we would be moved to help?
But the problem is not one of empathy. We are all familiar with the shape of a human body in hunger. The details, like glass paper, scarcely catch the imagination any more. It is not one of distance, either. A growing number of the wealthiest people in this world live in high-rise apartments that tower up and over the slums below—and they know only too well that before all the “beautiful forevers” will be lived a thousand impossible todays.1f
The problem, rather, is one of perspective, of what we choose not to see. There is no shortage of books telling us “why nations fail” or what “the bottom billion” on this planet must do to succeed, no shortage of policy papers from the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund saying much the same. But we still have not properly confronted how the poverty and suffering of a great many are connected to the wealth and privilege of a few.2f
We are slow to admit that the problem is one not of poverty traps at the bottom of the pyramid but of a great confinement of wealth at the top. It is a telling coincidence indeed that the past fifteen years, a period when global wealth more than doubled (from $117 trillion in 2000 to $263 trillion in 2014), have also been the age of the Millennium Development Goals (with their headline ambition of halving the proportion of people living on less than $1.25 a day).3 Those goals end this year, in 2015, in many cases not having been met. Meanwhile, global wealth keeps on growing: by 8.3% from mid-2013 to mid-2014 alone.4
There is a politics to this, but it is all too often ignored in a debate which to date has preferred to focus on the economics of the problem alone: as if the long-run dynamics of capital and income could be separate to the political history in which they are set. The primary purpose of this book is to paint this wider political context back into the picture, since our problems stem less from market forces than from the failed policies behind them. If this is partly cause for despair, then it is also cause for hope: our present predicaments are more amenable to change than we are often encouraged to believe.
But acting on the politics of inequality requires first grasping the full scale of the problem before us. Few of the world’s richest people intentionally exploit the world’s poor, it is obvious to note, and most of us are not personally responsible for the plight of distant strangers. But despite seven decades of international development, three decades of the Washington Concensus, and a decade and a half of Millennium Development Goals, the world today is more divided than ever among the haves, the have-nots, and—as President George W. Bush liked to quip over an after-dinner brandy—the have-mores. Class still rules our world, in short. But geography is now enlisted in its cause.5
This means that inequality is felt differently at different scales, even as those scales are increasingly connected.6 In rich and poor countries alike, however, and perhaps above all between them, inequality is a product of ingrained norms of status and rights that disqualify the needs and claims of some relative to others. The making of those norms in modern society is the history of the struggle between forces that seek to privatise public gain and forces that seek to nurture strong societies. To understand inequality, in its fullness, requires grasping this first of all. The exclusion of the poor via migration controls internationally, for example, is of a piece with the exclusion of particular social groups, such as Latinos, within a city like Los Angeles: there is a common core to both problems that it is possible to isolate and understand.
There are an increasing number of reasons to try. The extent to which the rich and powerful are today able to influence rules and procedures in a country like America is in part a product of the wealth they have accumulated elsewhere in the world; the struggle to make ends meet experienced by ordinary folk in austerity-ridden Greece is of a piece with very probems that the poorest of this world have confronted all along. Accordingly, there is no singular “us” versus “them” around which to build a greater justice. No clear-cut boundary to the problem of inequality. There are ongoing structures of exclusion and marginalisation and the imperative to try to understand their operation.
Hanging above the UN Security Council chamber is a vast mural painted by the Norwegian artist Per Krohg. The mural depicts a world rebuilding itself, after two world wars, on the principles of democracy, human rights, and equality. Seventy years later, and like the phoenix that Krohg places at the heart of his picture, this book opens upon the scene of a world still divided. In rich and poor countries alike, inequalities are becoming an ever more visible feature of contemporary society. Yet the origins of inequality—which have to do with questions of distribution, status, and authority—are so diverse that the larger structure itself often seems impossibly hard to pin down. This structure is so deeply embedded in the world—it seems so natural—that often we simply do not notice it properly. In this we are like the two little fish happily swimming along who meet a bigger fish swimming the other way. The bigger fish says good morning and asks them how the water is. The two little fish swim on for a bit until one of them suddenly turns to the other and asks, “What’s water?”7 Today we all need to do better at finding out how the water is.
The incentive could hardly be greater. Inequality is the “fount and matrix”, to borrow a phrase from the great economic historian Karl Polanyi, of a great many of our era’s most pressing global problems, be it climate change, food insecurity, economic volatility, or the demographic crises of migration and population growth.3f These problems will all resist even our best efforts to address them until we have the gap between poverty and privilege the world over more firmly in hand. Poor countries will not join us in ambitious carbon-cutting goals if they have no other means to sustain themselves.8 The world elite’s anxieties about migration and security will not go away if we cannot reduce the incentives for others to leave their own moribund nations or for economic actors to trade on terms that they may take hope or reason much to care from.
In difficult times we are tempted, if not encouraged, to look inwards, to lower our ambitions and shutter up our hopes. But global inequality is a challenge that we can meet only if we are prepared to do the opposite of that which conventional wisdom supposes: to look upwards and outwards, to think bigger not smaller, and to confront head-on the very heart of a problem which ails us all.
It is precisely here that our political imagination fails us. Our politics remains stuck in the past. Worse, it is stuck in the wrong past. Instead of imagining new ways of meeting the changing needs of society, we take comfort from well-worn clichés. Two centuries after the Enlightenment, when questions about the rise and fall of nations were first raised in earnest, today’s commentators continue to peddle an endless stream of “decline of the West, rise of the rest” narratives, sharing with us their misanthropic visions of a zero-sum world in which winner takes all (and the losses of everyone else are overlooked). We seem unable to devise the necessary paradigms for our own times.4f
If we could stop approaching the problems of our current political and economic order as if they were a parlour game, we might find it easier to identify and address the real challenges before us. At the very least, we might see that it is not “others” who threaten us in the first place—be they immigrants from whom we are told to protect our jobs (and fear for them), or the threats of an unspecified terrorism that we give up our civil liberties to counter. We are threatened much more directly by the facts of an unequal world and the consequences of those facts left to fester.
Left unaddressed, and inequality cuts into people’s health and education, and into the life chances of us all. It does this both within our own nations, at home, but also for others abroad. It erodes what is left of our national and local communities and prevents us from exploring more peaceful relations with those with whom we share our planet. And since we experience these effects of inequality socially, in addition to the toll it exacts upon us as individuals, we will ultimately pass them on to our children.
As recently as the roaring 1990s, it was common for people to believe that the gap between rich and poor simply didn’t matter any more. Time and again it was said that a rising tide of wealth would float all other boats. Since the onset of the 2007–2008 financial crisis, such confidence in the notion of trickle-down growth—the Kuznetsian belief that inequality now is necessary if we are to get to prosperity later—has rather dried up.5f But without it, neither side of the political spectrum seems to have the answers any more.
Internationally speaking, many on the right have responded to the recent economic downturn by retreating once again to the prejudices of the past: insisting that the world’s poor are poor through lack of ambition, lack of skill—the product of “cultures of poverty” and idle dependency still. No to “global welfare” screamed Britain’s Daily Mail in 2012, as the Conservative-led British government dared to maintain the previous Labour government’s commitment to increasing international aid contributions.9
But the left is short of answers too. The Occupy movement has drawn attention to the unfair share of wealth held by the top 1% of income earners in rich nations. Yet a good few of those protesting in New York’s Zuccotti Park in 2011 were themselves a part of the global 1% (at the time, so was anyone with an average annual income of $45,000 or more).10 This doesn’t invalidate their argument, but it does reveal a characteristic short-sightedness. The Indignados in Spain, Syriza in Greece, even middle-class student protestors in Chile—all are right to draw attention to the unearned privilege of a domestic superrich in times of national austerity: average wealth in the United States is now 19% more than even its pre-2008 peak, and in 2010, no less than 93% of post–financial crisis recovery in gross domestic product in the United States went to the top 1% of income earners. We are living in the age of Gatsby again.11
Yet what all too often goes unremarked in this debate is the fact that rising inequality in the United States and other wealthy countries is not, and has never been, isolated from a larger story about the international economy and international politics, which connect us to people and places we will likely never even hear of. Against this we need to ask ourselves, honestly, where it is we have learned our tolerance for inequality at large; we must ask where the power of banks and moneyed interests comes from and how, in different ways, it is wielded over all of us; we must ask ourselves why the international decisions purportedly taken in our name seem to benefit just the usual few, and we must ask whether this is unrelated to the level of interest we ourselves pay to the ballot box. For all the talk that inequality is driving us apart, the politics of rich and poor the world over are, as I want to show in this book, in fact more closely entwined than ever before. And this being the case, the manner in which that politics is to be managed is of the utmost relevance, not just in terms of socioeconomic justice but also in terms of the viability of democracy itself.
There is a geography as much as a politics to inequality, in short, and when it comes to addressing the root of the problem, we need to keep this very much in mind. This poses two particular challenges. The first challenge is implicit in the fact that, while we now have a healthy debate in the United States and Europe about the historical return of inequality to our nations, we are blind still to the issue of inequality at the global scale. And yet, internationally, of course, inequality never went away. That we choose to overlook this is in part because the discussion of national inequality in countries like Britain and America latches firmly onto wealth as the problem (to wit, we vent our fury at the bankers) while the discussion of global inequality continues to focus almost exclusively on the poor (insisting that they lack this or that attribute: democracy, property rights, or the necessary “work ethic” most usually).
Changing this requires not only establishing why some people are richer or poorer now than they were in the past—this has been Thomas Piketty’s great contribution—but also recognising exactly how privilege and suffering are hardwired into the world.6f We are accustomed now to hearing about the economics of inequality. But wealth and power are structurally embedded in political society at large. They are also embedded internationally. Yet our present debate shows almost no interest at all in the plight of those who are daily kept in outright poverty by the incessant chasing of wealth elsewhere. Those who do show an interest, by contrast, are often the very individuals and corporations seeking to play the absolute poverty of the one (Bangladeshi sweatshop labourers, for example) against the relative poverty of others (Western workers, usually).
But history suggests that there are more hopeful connections we might draw here: coalitions can be forged and compromises found between people of differing outlooks and needs; individuals can overcome their prejudices of other people and places; and—by changing the scale at which they conceived of intransigent problems—societies in the past did find the tools they needed to address the extent of inequality in their societies.
There are good reasons, then, to pay attention to the history of social and political inequality in different places, since it tells us not only about those policy regimes under which inequality grows but also about the impact of policies conceived in opposition to it. America’s New Deal and Europe’s Golden Age, the first debates over modern democracy in post-Napoleonic France, the Kanslergade and Saltsjöbaden class compromises in Scandinavia, the granting of full suffrage to women and the US civil rights movement—all these and more are object lessons that inequality and the injustices that sustain it need not be an inevitable trajectory anywhere, and that answers to difficult questions can usually, with a modicum of political acumen, be found.
It may well have been the widening gulf between rich and poor in the early twentieth century, for example, that delivered the world into the Great Depression, and then in turn gave fascism and Soviet communism grounds for making their historical advances. But it was the fallout from the Second World War that would ensure that most Western countries never again fell prey to the extremism of either side of the political spectrum (until recently, perhaps). And it was that atmosphere of postwar tolerance that led most of the more successful rich nations to oversee a period of state-regulated capitalism, thereby narrowing their levels of domestic inequality and increasing social inclusion.
In most countries it was the war itself that kick-started this period: it was war that brought society to its senses after the excesses of the Gilded Age, and war that levelled incomes as much as cities across the West, clearing the way for the Golden Age that would follow. But surely we can found a more positive politics of change for our own times, one that does not leave everything to war or chance alone? At the very least, the history of those times and places where inequality has been reduced points us to the importance of expanding political agency rather than closing it off. History teaches us that in times like ours, we need more, not less, politics: but we need to learn this history first of all.
Yet if we are to avoid the temptations of cynicism in this task, we must equally avoid nostalgia: and here too geography proves a useful guide. There is certainly an art to recognising how deeply ingrained problems, intractable though they seem to us as individuals, can be solved when we decide to settle our differences collectively. And we would do well, I am suggesting, to rediscover this. But we need to do more than simply hark back to the Western past. For all its achievements, the Golden Age shone brightly for relatively few people on this planet. The historical narrowing of the gap between rich and poor in just a few fortunate countries in the West never carried over to the gap between rich and poor countries at large. And when we look back at the twentieth century, this surely counts among the least remarked of its many catastrophes. It is without doubt into yet another unmarked grave of that century that the achievements of those same more fortunate countries are now themselves being flung at the hands of the market neoliberalism and liberal democratic triumphalism that have monopolised Western politics since the end of the Cold War.
At the very heart of this book, then, is the claim that we need a new politics to sustain us into the twenty-first century. We need a new strategy of equality to get us there too. Inequality may be felt most strongly within any one national community, but the challenge of inequality is a global one. Meeting it must begin, as the French political historian Pierre Rosanvallon says, with “rethink[ing] the whole idea of equality itself.”12 But it must also involve, in the twenty-first century, rethinking the scale at which equality needs to be made. As we shall see, this implies a series of rather more practical concerns. Not least, it serves as a timely reminder for Europe and America, in particular, to practice a little humility, to look outside their own treasured histories for solutions to the problem that they, as much as any other, now face. We rail today at the injustice of paying off the debt incurred by banks that were bailed out during the credit crisis, but this is what the Third World debt burden has always been about—common people paying off debts incurred by corrupt elites. There are plenty more connections too, if we care to look.
The second challenge arises to the extent that we are able to make progress towards the first. It concerns the fact that the more general crisis of the Western welfare state that we have been experiencing of late is not itself unrelated to the ongoing injustice of uneven global development. The runaway increase in wealth that today accrues to the richest of this world is what prices something like health care out of reach for even the moderately well-to-do; but these inequalities of wealth that are undermining the Western welfare state are produced through an international economy that itself comes to rest on the backs of the global poor, denying them their due of global public goods as well. The situation, as it confronts us today, is therefore simple: either we push forward with social protection globally, or we will see it continue to fall apart in the global North as much as in the global South. On one level, it might be said that these connections are too indirect, the causality too diffuse. Inequality is natural, we are told time and again. Of course we should expect to see it everywhere we look. But such claims, which are usually made by those with a vested interest in the status quo, confuse non-equality with inequality. Non-equality is desirable. It means difference, diversity, plurality, variety. Inequality is a product of structural forms of injustice. It means marginalisation, discrimination, neglect. And a system which serves some more than others.
This, then, is the wider landscape of inequality about which this book is concerned. And it is for this reason that it makes sense, I think, to speak of the political origins of inequality. To speak of just origins would be quite wrong: it would suggest a singularity of cause and a primacy of effect that simply does not pertain. Inequality is not a thing that we can work upon directly, in the hope of making more or less of it; it is a product of the wider choices a given society makes about how to organise itself, and the constraints placed upon that society from within and without. That being said, it is not entirely elusive, either. And from amongst the observable pattern of what passes for modern politics today, there are some things that more obviously need to be changed than others.
To introduce the qualifying adjective “political” is important, then, because by doing so, we accept that the dynamic of inequality (and it is a dynamic) is part inherited, part resisted, part intended, and part simply unrecognised: we are in a mess, in short, because of some things we have knowingly done, but also because there are other things we felt we really didn’t have much choice about (mainstream economics being both author and beneficiary of the latter). This book is not a search for the origins of inequality, therefore, but an effort to understand the politics of inequality as that politics is made between people and places.
This is not, to be sure, the first time these sorts of questions have been raised. For the British historian R. H. Tawney, inequality was perpetuated in the modern world by a sort of historical bait and switch. Society civilises over time, naturally enough, but as it renounces the overt celebration of princes in their privilege, the sources of inequality are not so much outlawed as folded into the new institutional backcloth of society. As he surveyed the nature and extent of inequality in Britain and America in 1931—a fateful time to be doing so—it was thus all too clear for Tawney that, while inequality might no longer have been the “religion” that it once was in these countries, it was nonetheless a venerable tradition still.7f
Tawney’s work brims with insights still today. And yet when asked, at the end of his life, to write a new introduction to his classic work, Equality, he confessed to being no longer up to the task. His mental faculties were as sharp as ever. The problem, he felt, was that the nature and causes of inequality had become only that more much diffuse again: ingrained across a rapidly changing society and politics. In the Britain of the then 1950s, the political origins of inequality were slipping further out of sight. In the thicket of modern society, “ancient inequalities had assumed subtler and more sophisticated forms”, as the sociologist Richard Titmuss put it.13 And chief among those sophisticated forms was the fact that Britain’s problems were no longer confined to Britain alone.
Tawney’s problem was the same one that had defeated Jean-Jacques Rousseau over a century before.8f Rousseau never elaborated his Discourse on Inequality into an intended magnum opus “Political Institutions” (he burned the manuscripts and settled instead for the not-inconsiderable The Social Contract), in part because of his growing awareness “of the difficulty of his original undertaking”. That difficulty, as the British political philosopher G. H. Cole wrote, was precisely that “he would have needed to deal not only with the nature of the social bond in any particular society, but also with the problems of the relations between one society and another, and with the whole question of moral obligations as arising for mankind as a whole”.14
We are duly warned, then. And yet if Tawney got further than Rousseau (thanks chiefly to the invention, in the long century between them, of modern statistics), we have at least grounds, given the information at our fingertips, to speculate about some of those more diffuse origins as they concern societies, in the plural, today. For all the difficulties of this task, it is in any case imperative that we try. The best of our theories about inequality being based on a model of geographically closed societies, we are without the tools we need to make sense of our current, global inequality.
Now, it is true, as Thomas Piketty has argued, that it is the national scale that in many senses still matters. As Piketty points out, for all that many in the Western world today fret about the “rise” of emerging economies like China, the global future may well be one in which the poorer countries indeed catch up with the level of development of the wealthier ones. But in that longer term, their societies are also likely to have become more unequal. So touché. Perhaps. But there are two problems with this. The first is a moral one: must we really wait that long, knowing that we will merely have ended up with a more unequal world than our own, albeit a more “evenly uneven” one? The second is a theoretical one—why should we assume that their future will be the same as our past? This is the classic error of the diffusionist Eurocentrism that dominated the modernisation theories of mid-twentieth-century economies.
As against this we might expect, first of all, that other societies can and will draw upon different norms and institutions to manage their future economic relations from those we have thus far contrived to imagine for ourselves. Second, we should anticipate that we will ourselves want to take part in this process—that we may indeed stand to benefit from doing so. Both insights are in any case central to the discussion in this book. And it is perhaps here that Tawney, the twentieth-century historian, has something to teach Piketty, the twenty-first-century economist. For to properly understand inequality, Tawney argued, it was necessary to look not just at the dynamics and the composition of capital, but at the “the particular forms of inequality which are general and acceptable and the particular arrangement of classes to which they are accustomed”.15
Ours being a global world, there is nothing for it today but to consider those forms in international perspective. Development is dead. The Western welfare state is in crisis. The challenge of inequality unites them both. If we cannot find reason to care what happens to distant others, then we will not find the means to help those who, through the split and the press of inequality, become strangers to us at home as well. And not finding reason to help them, we will be left to confront alone a range of modern problems whose solution we can find only together. This is not a challenge for the West alone. Much of the initiative must come from elsewhere. But the response does need to begin with the West, with a re-opening of the rich world, and of those who move within its circles of privilege.
This, then, is our starting point. World poverty and the inequality from which it stems need addressing today more than ever: they are, as we shall see, at the heart of so much else that ails us. But this will not come about through top-down policies of international aid and development (any more than will addressing the myriad associated problems of environmental degradation, economic instability, and ethnic strife). Nor will it come about if we merely button down into our own national pods and fret about inequality and the crisis of the Western welfare state, as if they were domestic problems alone. What is required, rather, is to establish the grounds for greater political and social inclusion at the national and international levels and to commit ourselves to more joined-up forms of democracy to ensure this. We must find just exactly where the twain can meet.
The message of this book is a simple one, therefore: “we” cannot end global poverty as individuals, but our societies, if we reinvigorate them politically, can reduce the inequality from which it stems. We can remove the venom from the bite and avoid the inevitable social backlash, which sooner or later will affect us all, even in our own communities back home. We can do all this without the enforced humility of war, as we shall see, by expanding on the lessons of two centuries of social policy and refitting them to meet our future, international needs. And since it is the underlying structural inequalities and the political forms determining them which together are the primary cause of our present discontents, it is with these that we are best advised to begin.
For if we can show (and we can) that the wealthy presently enjoy many of their privileges at the cost of others’ continuing poverty, and if we can show (and we can) that neither rich nor poor are flourishing as they might, then we have the grounds for asking: Might not we all do better if those of us with a choice about such things found ways to include rather than exclude the poor, to engage with difference rather than seeking to manage it? What if, instead of projecting our fears onto others and accepting a world in which poverty and wealth grow ever farther apart, we sought to bring back in those we have excluded? What would that world look like?
This book is an exercise in finding out.