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Global Inequality. The nature of global inequality Rural Poverty Is global inequality getting better or worse? Theories of global inequality Modernization theory Dependency Theory. The nature of global inequality.
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Global Inequality • The nature of global inequality • Rural Poverty • Is global inequality getting better or worse? • Theories of global inequality • Modernization theory • Dependency Theory
The nature of global inequality • In the world today, the richest 25% of the population receives 75% of the world income. • The richest people of the world live in North America, Europe, and Australia. • The poorest people of the world live in Africa, India and Southeast Asia.
People in poor countries have little in the way of possessions • Diets are often poor and lack meat , fruit and vegetables • Medical care is limited • As a result, life expectancy is short
In poor countries, the poorest people live in rural areas. • Growing populations and traditional farming techniques overstress the land, leading to erosion and deforestation and poor yields.
Government policies tend to favor city people • E.g. caps on prices of grain help city people, but hurt rural farmers
Is global inequality getting better or worse? • Depends on how you measure it • By country, it is getting worse • For individuals, it is getting better • Why is this? Because the most populous poor countries, China and India, have rising Gross Domestic Products (GDPs).
Theories of Global Inequality • Modernization theory (Rostow 1960) • Suggested that all countries would inevitably go through the four stages of development
The traditional society • The preconditions for takeoff • The drive to maturity • The age of high mass consumption
Modernization theory has been criticized for being over optimistic • 50 years after it was created, many countries in the world are not developed.
Dependency theory • Dependency theory suggests that the reason why poor countries do not develop is because they are forcibly dependent on rich countries. • Poor countries sell raw materials that are used for the industries of the rich countries.
Means that most of the profits of manufacturing stay in rich world. • No capital to develop industries in poor countries.
Problems – some countries initially dependent on selling raw materials have managed to build industry – e.g. Canada, Australia, U.S. • Places like China and India have been able to develop.
China and India have been able to turn their one resource – people – into an asset (cheap labor)