Is inequality inevitable?

1,048,187 views ・ 2022-10-11

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:09
In South Africa, one of the most unequal countries in the world,
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the richest one-tenth of 1%, owns almost 30% of all the country’s wealth,
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more than double what the bottom 90% owns.
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Income and wealth inequality are not new.
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In fact, economists and historians who’ve charted economic inequality
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throughout history haven’t found a single society without it.
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Which raises a bleak question:
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is inequality inevitable?
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One way to estimate inequality is with a number called the Gini index,
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which is calculated by comparing the income or wealth distribution
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of a perfectly equal society to the actual income or wealth distribution.
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The area of this shape multiplied by 2 is the Gini index.
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A Gini of 1 indicates perfect inequality—
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one person has everything and everyone else has nothing.
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01:01
You’d never see this in real life
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because everyone except that one person would starve.
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A Gini index of 0 indicates perfect equality—
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everyone has exactly the same income or wealth.
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But you also never see this in real life, not even in communist countries,
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because for one thing, that would mean paying everyone—
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no matter how young, old, what job they’re in or where they work—
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the exact same wage.
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Typical after-tax Ginis in developed countries today are around 0.3,
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though there’s a wide range from pretty equal to pretty unequal.
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Before we go any further, you should know what the Gini index—
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or any other measure of economic inequality— doesn’t tell us:
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it gives no information about how income and wealth are distributed
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across genders, races, educational backgrounds or other demographics;
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it doesn’t tell us how easy or difficult it is to escape poverty.
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And it also gives no insight as to how a particular society
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arrived at its present level of inequality.
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Economic inequality is deeply entangled with other types of inequality:
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for example, generations of discrimination, imperialism,
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and colonialism
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created deeply rooted power and class inequalities
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that persist to this day.
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But we still need at least a rough measure of who gets how much in a country.
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That’s what the Gini index gives us.
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Some countries are, economically, much more unequal than others.
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And that’s because a significant portion of economic inequality
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is the result of choices that governments make.
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Let's talk about some of these choices.
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First: what kind of economy to use.
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In the 20th century, some countries switched to socialism or communism
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for a variety of reasons,
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including reducing economic inequality.
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These changes did dramatically reduce economic inequality
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in the two largest non-capitalist economies,
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China and the Soviet Union— especially in the Soviet Union.
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But neither country prospered as much as the world's leading economies.
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So yes, people earned about as much as their neighbors did,
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but that wasn’t very much.
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This— and many other issues— contributed to the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.
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And China, to grow more quickly, shifted its economy towards capitalism
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starting in the late 1970s.
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What about capitalist countries?
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Can they choose to reduce economic inequality?
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It’s tempting to think
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“no, because the whole point of capitalism is to hoard enough gold coins
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to be able to dive into them like Scrooge McDuck.”
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China seems to provide the textbook example of this:
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after it became more capitalist,
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its Gini index shot up from under 0.4 to over 0.55.
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Meanwhile, its per capita yearly income
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jumped from the rough equivalent of $1,500 to over $13,000.
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But there are many counter-examples:
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capitalist countries in which inequality is actually holding steady or decreasing.
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France has kept its Gini index below 0.32 since 1979.
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Ireland's Gini has been trending mostly downward since 1995.
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The Netherlands and Denmark have kept theirs below 0.28 since the 1980s.
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How do they do it?
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One way is with taxes.
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Personal income taxes in most countries are progressive:
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the more money you make, the higher your tax rate.
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And the more progressive your tax system, the more it reduces inequality.
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So, for example, while pre-tax income inequality in France
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is roughly the same as it is in the US,
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post-tax inequality in France is roughly 20% lower.
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Meanwhile, inheritance taxes can reduce the amount of wealth
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that a single family can amass over generations.
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Germany and many other European countries have inheritance or estate taxes
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that kick in at a few thousand to a few hundred thousand Euros,
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depending on who's inheriting.
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The US, on the other hand,
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lets you inherit $12 million without paying any federal tax.
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Another way is with transfers—
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when the government takes tax revenues from one group of people
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and gives it to another.
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For example, Social Security programs tax people who work
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and use the revenue to support retirees.
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In Italy, about a quarter of Italians’ disposable household income
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comes from government transfers.
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That’s a lot, especially relative to the US,
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where the figure is just over 5%.
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A third way is to ensure that everyone has access to things
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like education and healthcare.
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A highly educated, healthy workforce can command a higher salary on the market,
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thus reducing inequality.
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The fourth way is addressing the digital divide:
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the gap between those who have access to the Internet and those who do not.
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A fifth way is dealing with extreme wealth.
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Multibillionaires can buy social media platforms,
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news outlets, policy think-tanks, perhaps even politicians,
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and bend them to their will,
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threatening the very fabric of democracy.
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We are just barely scratching the surface of inequality here.
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We haven’t touched on the drastic divides in who has wealth and who doesn’t;
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the power structures that prevent social and economic mobility;
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and the drastic inequality between countries—
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the fact that, for example,
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just three Americans have 90 billion more dollars than Egypt,
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a country of 100 million people.
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And here’s one final thing to think about: power and wealth are self-reinforcing,
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which means that equality is not.
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Left to their own devices, societies tend toward inequality—
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unless we weaken the feedback loops of wealth and power concentration.
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