The Roots of Growing Global Disparity

What’s driving rising global inequality

Global inequality—both across nations and within their borders—has evolved through a tangled interplay of economic, technological, political and environmental forces over the past forty years, with some dynamics narrowing gaps between countries, as seen in China’s rapid expansion and growth across parts of Asia, while others have significantly deepened income and wealth divides within most advanced and many emerging economies; grasping these underlying forces clarifies why resources accumulate among a limited few even as vast populations remain exposed to persistent vulnerability.

Key forces shaping the economy

Strong returns on capital relative to overall expansion The dynamic underscored by Thomas Piketty—showing that capital yields can outstrip economic growth—remains pivotal. When returns on assets (r) surpass GDP growth (g) for extended stretches, capital holders build wealth more rapidly than wages advance. This long‑running trend helps clarify why a growing portion of national income flows toward property, equities, and other capital assets instead of labor.

Financialization and asset-price inflation Since the 1980s, financial sectors have increased share and influence in many economies. Policies and market shifts that favor financial assets—lower interest rates, deregulation and large-scale monetary easing—have driven equity and real estate prices higher. Quantitative easing and low policy rates after the 2008 crisis and during the COVID-19 pandemic boosted asset values, disproportionately benefiting households that own stocks and housing. For example, stock market recoveries and rebounds increased the net worth of wealthy investors and billionaire wealth grew markedly during the pandemic years.

Falling labor share and weak wage growth The share of national income directed to wages has diminished across numerous countries, a trend linked to automation, offshore production, reduced collective bargaining power, and labor market deregulation. As labor’s portion contracts, a greater share of economic output accrues to capital owners and higher‑income groups. In many advanced economies, the erosion of middle‑skill manufacturing roles has intensified wage polarization, marked by robust gains at the top and stagnation or decline for workers in the middle and lower tiers.

Technology and the winner-takes-most economy

Automation, digital platforms and artificial intelligence Technological advances raise productivity, but they also favor owners of capital and highly skilled workers. Automation and AI disproportionately displace routine middle-skill jobs, creating job polarization: growth in high-skill, high-pay jobs and low-skill, low-pay service work, while shrinking middleskill roles. Digital platforms create “superstar” firms with strong network effects and scalable business models that capture large market shares and large profits. That concentration channels returns to a small number of founders, early investors and executives.

Intangible assets and returns to skill The modern economy increasingly rewards intangible capital—software, brands, patents—assets that are highly scalable and often legally protected. Returns to advanced skills have risen: tertiary-educated workers on average earn substantially more than those without. This widening skill premium increases income inequality when access to quality education is unequal.

Globalization, trade and labor market shifts

Offshoring and exposure to global competition Trade liberalization and global supply chains lowered consumer prices and boosted growth in some developing countries, but they also exposed workers in high-wage industries to competition. Offshoring of manufacturing and routine services contributed to wage pressure for less-skilled workers in advanced economies, increasing within-country inequality even as global poverty fell in some regions.

Asymmetric gains across countries Globalization reduced extreme poverty in China and India and narrowed between-country inequality. Yet many middle-income countries and disadvantaged regions did not share equally in these gains; within-country inequality often rose as benefits concentrated among urban, connected and educated groups.

Policy, institutions and redistribution

Tax policy and redistribution changes Progressive taxation and public spending are primary tools to reduce inequality. But since the 1980s many countries reduced top marginal tax rates, lowered corporate taxes, and expanded tax preferences for capital gains. The United States provides a clear example: top marginal income tax rates fell from postwar highs (over 70 percent in the early 1980s) to much lower rates in subsequent decades, while capital gains and corporate tax regimes favored asset owners. Global minimum corporate tax agreements (a 15 percent floor agreed by many countries from 2021 onward) are a recent partial response to tax competition, but enforcement and base-broadening challenges remain.

Decline in unionization and labor protections The erosion of union strength and the diminishing role of collective bargaining have been linked to sluggish wage growth for the average worker. Falling union membership, increasingly flexible labor agreements, and weakened labor safeguards have collectively undermined employees’ negotiating leverage, helping widen the income gap between executives and standard workers.

Tax avoidance, secrecy jurisdictions and rent-seeking Legal tax shelters, transfer pricing schemes, and the reliance on secrecy jurisdictions drain public revenues that might otherwise support redistributive programs. Large corporations and affluent individuals frequently gain the most from loopholes and advanced avoidance methods, weakening governments’ capacity to finance education, healthcare, and essential social protections.

Corporate consolidation and governance oversight

Market concentration and monopoly rents Increasing concentration in major sectors—technology, retail, finance, pharmaceuticals—creates economic rents that accrue to shareholders and top executives. Antitrust enforcement has sometimes lagged behind market realities, enabling dominant firms to set prices, capture data, and reinforce market positions that favor capital over labor.

Corporate distribution practices Through share repurchases and dividend-centered strategies, companies route earnings to their investors, and executive pay is often tied to stock performance, strengthening the cycle that connects corporate gains to wealthy households.

Crises and upheavals that intensify inequality

COVID-19 pandemic The pandemic revealed and deepened existing inequalities. Many lower-paid workers in service and informal sectors lost jobs and income, while numerous asset holders experienced rising net worth as asset values rebounded. Reports highlighted major increases in billionaire wealth during 2020–2021, even as poverty and unemployment grew among vulnerable populations.

Climate change and environmental risks Climate shocks often hit the poor hardest, as they rely on climate-sensitive sources of income and have limited means to adjust. Rising heat, prolonged droughts and severe storms can wreck the homes and productive assets of low-income households, diminishing their lifetime earning prospects and deepening existing inequalities.

Geopolitical shocks and supply disruptions Trade disruptions and localized conflicts can push up living expenses and increase unemployment among low- and middle-income groups, while asset holders who can diversify or relocate their investments may experience less impact.

Data overviews and sample scenarios

Wealth concentration Based on leading wealth databases and assessments by civil society, the richest 10 percent of adults possess most of the world’s assets, with widely referenced estimates indicating they control between two thirds and three quarters of global wealth, while the top 1 percent now commands a far larger portion than a generation earlier. Throughout the COVID years, the total wealth of global billionaires grew sharply even as millions were pushed into poverty.

The United States’ pre-tax income share held by the top 1 percent climbed from about 10 percent in the 1970s to roughly 20 percent or higher in more recent years, a shift driven by escalating executive compensation, growing financialization and increasing market concentration, while CEO-to-worker pay ratios surged sharply.

China and global convergence China’s rapid expansion narrowed global income gaps by pulling hundreds of millions out of extreme poverty, yet its domestic income inequality increased, with Gini coefficient estimates in recent decades ranging around 0.45–0.50, highlighting pronounced disparities between urban and rural communities as well as across regions.

Latin America Long marked as one of the world’s most unequal regions, Latin America experienced a moderate easing of inequality during the 2000s, supported by a commodity surge and broader social initiatives, yet deep structural challenges and recent disruptions continue to restrict meaningful advancement.

Sub-Saharan Africa Many countries face rising within-country inequality exacerbated by weak formal employment opportunities, limited access to finance and land constraints, even as some countries post strong growth rates.

Policies capable of reshaping the path forward

  • Progressive taxation and closing loopholes — enhance genuine tax progressivity on income, capital gains and wealth, while applying stricter anti-avoidance measures and reducing the use of secrecy jurisdictions.
  • Redistributive public spending — channel resources into broad access to healthcare, education and childcare to strengthen human capital and mitigate long-term inequality.
  • Labor-market reforms — adjust minimum wages where suitable, safeguard collective bargaining, and promote upskilling and continuous learning to ease job polarization.
  • Competition and platform regulation — apply robust antitrust oversight, restrict exploitative data and market-power behaviors, and secure fair tax payments from digital enterprises.
  • Targeted asset policies — expand affordable housing options, improve access to retirement savings, and encourage wider asset ownership among middle- and lower-income groups.
  • Global cooperation — advance coordinated tax standards, development financing, climate adaptation resources and migration channels to distribute the benefits of globalization more equitably.

Balancing considerations and addressing implementation hurdles

Policy responses encounter political economy limits as influential groups push back against redistributive measures, progressive tax schemes demand administrative capabilities that many nations still lack, and global coordination proves challenging when different jurisdictions compete to attract investment. Technological shifts and climate threats call for forward-looking policies, including education initiatives and social safeguards that may be politically sensitive yet remain economically wise.

Rising global inequality is not the product of a single cause but the interaction of market returns, technological change, policy choices and institutional shifts. Some forces—rapid asset appreciation, winner-take-all digital markets, weakened labor protections and tax regimes favoring capital—systematically channel income and wealth upward. Crises like pandemics and climate shocks accelerate those dynamics. Reversing or slowing these trends requires deliberate, sustained public policy across taxation, labor markets, competition policy and global cooperation; absent such action, the structural momentum that favors capital and high-skilled winners will likely continue to widen gaps within and between societies, shaping economic opportunity and political stability for decades to come.

By Mitchell G. Patton

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