Inequality and Sustainability
Date
2002
Authors
Butler, Colin
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Abstract
Global civilisation, and therefore population health, is threatened by excessive inequality, weapons of mass destruction, inadequate economic and political theory and adverse global environmental change. The unequal distribution of global foreign exchange adjusted income is both a cause and a reflection of global social characteristics responsible for many aspects of these inter-related crises. ¶ The global distribution of foreign exchange adjusted income for the period 1964-1999 is examined. Using data for more than 99% of the global population, a substantial divergence in its distribution is found. The global Gini co-efficient, adjusted for national income inequality, increased from an already high value of 71% in 1964 to peak at more than 80% in 1995, before falling, very slightly, to 79% in 1999. The global distribution of purchasing parity power income is also examined, for a similar period. Though also found to be extremely unequal, its trend has not been to increased inequality. Implications of the differences between these two trends are discussed. ...
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Keywords
inequality • sustainability • civilisation • causality • demography • carrying capacity • global environmental change • global income distribution • Kravis coefficient • purchasing power parity • caste system • demographic entrapment • ecological entrapment • environmental brinkmanship • scenarios • futures • fortress world • Boserup principle • stratospheric ozone depletion • index of global environmental change • IGEC
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Thesis (PhD)