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<b>Robert Weissman <rob@essential.org></b>The Age of
Inequality<br>
<br>
Here's the latest evidence of the startling growth of income and
wealth<br>
inequality, in the United States and around the world:<br>
<br>
The Washington Post's Ceci Connolly reports this week on the
development<br>
of a new innovation in healthcare delivery: "boutique" or
"concierge"<br>
coverage for the world's super-elite.<br>
<br>
Leading medical providers like the Cleveland Clinic and Johns Hopkins
in<br>
Baltimore are establishing special programs to give platinum service
to<br>
the well-heeled. Depending on the program, the super-rich customers
may<br>
receive massages and sauna time along with their physical,
housecalls,<br>
and step-to-the-front-of-the-line service in testing facilities.<br>
<br>
Using these services are a worldwide elite class of business
executives<br>
and royalty -- the "winners" in a system of corporate
globalization that<br>
is generating morally repugnant economic disparities.<br>
<br>
Here are some other measures of the g ins of the wealthy:<br>
<br>
* Executive pay at top U.S. corporations climbed 571 percent from
1990<br>
to 2000.<br>
<br>
* There are presently nearly 500 billionaires worldwide.<br>
<br>
* U.S. corporate tax payments are slated to drop to historic lows as
a<br>
result of the tax bill enacted into law earlier this year. According
to<br>
Citizens for Tax Justice, corporate taxes will plummet to only 1.3<br>
percent of U.S. gross domestic product this year, the lowest since<br>
fiscal 1983, and the second lowest level in the last 60 years.<br>
<br>
* More than half of the tax cuts enacted last year that are scheduled
to<br>
take effect after 2002 will go to the best-off 1 percent of all
U.S.<br>
taxpayers.<br>
<br>
Even in the United States -- the nation that is supposed to be the<br>
biggest winner from globalization -- the average person has watched<br>
skyrocketing executive compensation and wealth accumulation, but has
not<br>
been able to climb even a few steps up the economic ladder. Average
real<br>
wages in the United Sta es are at or below the wage rate of 1973.<br>
<br>
Meanwhile, poverty remains pervasive in both the United States and<br>
around the world.<br>
<br>
* One in six children in the United States live in poverty.<br>
<br>
* In 2000, a full quarter of the U.S. population was earning<br>
poverty-level wages, according to the Economics Policy Institute.<br>
<br>
* Around the world, 1.2 billion persons live on a dollar a day, or
less.<br>
<br>
* Tens of millions of children worldwide are locked out of school<br>
because their parents are unable to afford school fees.<br>
<br>
* More than a million children die a year form diarrhea, because
their<br>
families lack access to clean drinking water.<br>
<br>
The Institute for Policy Studies has sought to put these
disparities<br>
into perspective. The 497 billionaires in 2001 registered a
combined<br>
wealth of $1.54 trillion, according to IPS, well over the combined
gross<br>
national products of all the nations of sub-Saharan Africa ($929.3<br>
billion) or those of the oil-rich regions of he Middle East and
North<br>
Africa ($1.34 trillion). "This collective wealth of the 497 is
also<br>
greater than the combined incomes of the poorest half of humanity,"
IPS<br>
concludes.<br>
<br>
It's not very easy to wrap one's mind around the inhumanity of
these<br>
numbers.<br>
<br>
That is why it is so important to highlight anecdotes that put the<br>
problem in focus: the juxtaposition of concierge healthcare with
the<br>
more than 40 million people in the United States who have no health<br>
insurance coverage at all, the contrast between the boutique care
and<br>
the more than a million children dying each year because they don't
have<br>
clean water to drink.<br>
<br>
Sometimes, we need to recognize obscene social arrangements for
what<br>
they are, and demand something different.<br>
<br>
<br>
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate
Crime<br>
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based<br>
Multinational Monitor, http
//<a href="http://www.multinationalmonitor.org/" eudora="autourl">www.multinationalmonitor.org</a>.
They are<br>
co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the<br>
Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999;<br>
<a href="http://www.corporatepredators.org/" eudora="autourl">http://www.corporatepredators.org</a>).<br>
<br>
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman<br>
<br>
This article is posted at:<br>
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<br>
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