
The Divide
Global Inequality from Conquest to Free Markets
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Narrated by:
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Jonathan Cowley
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By:
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Jason Hickel
Sixty percent of humanity - some four-point-three billion people - live in debilitating poverty. The standard development narrative suggests that alleviating poverty in poor countries is a matter of getting the internal policies right, combined with aid from rich countries. But anthropologist Jason Hickel argues that this approach misses the broader political forces at play.
Global poverty - and the growing divide between "developing" and "developed" countries - has to do with how the global economy has been designed over the course of 500 years through conquest, colonialism, regime change, debt, and trade deals. Global inequality doesn't just exist; it has been created.
To close the divide, Dr. Hickel proposes dramatic action rooted in real justice: we must abolish debt burdens in the developing world; democratize the IMF, World Bank, and WTO; and institute a global minimum wage, among many other vital steps. Only then will we have a chance at a world built on equal footing.
©2017 Jason Hickel (P)2018 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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a must read
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I learned something new with every chapter and so much more about things that I thought I was well informed about. It also reinforced some of my beliefs about how economics, politics, and power structures should function; namely that they need profound structural changes if we are to survive climate change.
The only minor issue that I have with the book is that his proposed solutions don't go far enough and actually answer the thesis that he sets out early on in book. He's correct in stating that it is an unsustainable waste of time, and resources to keep trying to plug the fire hose of poverty, and suffering by shoving a cork in the spout, but as a species we need to focus our efforts working towards solutions that shut the hose off.
His global scale Enhanced Keynesian policies don't do this, and can't do it. If it was implemented it would without a doubt be a massive improvement over the current state of the world, but it doesn't quite get to the root of the issue; Capitalism. Until we have democratic control over our workplaces, and the surplus of our labor we won't end exploitation. In addition to bringing democracy into the worlplace, there needs to be the complete dissolution of the existing state and corporate hierarchies. These two goals are needed to ensure that our gains do not get rolled back by the owning class, just like the New Deal was systematically torn apart by the those same .1%-ers.
Beyond Excellent
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Must read
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