Even from their perch atop global capitalism’s peak, many of the world’s most influential people see the disparities in global wealth as a serious threat to their conception of continued prosperity and the stable cohesion of society.
According to the ” report released by the World Economic Forum on Thursday, the vast, growing and “chronic” income divide between the rich and the poor across the world is currently the greatest threat to global stability.
Though the WEF is broadly seen as the collective voice of the people and institutions who have most benefited from the coercive nature of global capitalism, the findings of the report are in some ways most striking exactly because of the source.
“The chronic gap between the incomes of the richest and poorest citizens is seen as the risk that is most likely to cause serious damage globally in the coming decade,” the WEF report states.
Joining the group’s list of conditions that are “most likely” to cause global instability across the world in the coming decade are extreme weather events, unemployment, fiscal crises, and cyber attacks.
Having surveyed over 700 experts from industry, government, academia and civil society, the authors of the report state:
Income gaps are coming in at all-time highs around the globe. According to a recent study, the U.S. income disparity between the wealthiest 1% (families with incomes above $394,000 in 2012) and everyone else is the widest it’s been since 1927, and the top 10% of earners took in “a level higher than any other year since 1917 and even surpasses 1928, the peak of stock market bubble in the ‘roaring’ 1920s.”
Click Here: Golf special
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT