THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE - May 25th, 2016
In Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Globalization, Branko Milanovic offers
a new account of the dynamics that are driving inequality on a global
scale. Although left slightly frustrated by its abrupt end, Duncan Green praises
this brilliant and thought-provoking book for its political curiosity
and insight and, more particularly, for its reflections on the possible
trajectory of inequality in the twenty-first century.
Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Globalization. Branko Milanovic. Harvard University Press. 2016.
Some of my favourite development economists are nomads, people with
feet in different regions, which seems to make them better able to
identify interesting patterns and similarities/differences between
countries. This includes Ha-Joon Chang (Korea/UK), Dani Rodrik (Turkey/US) and now Branko Milanovic (Serbia/US), whose latest book, Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Globalization,
is a brilliant and thought-provoking essay stuffed with enough graphs
to satisfy the numerati, anecdotes for the general reader and political
insights for the policy wonks. Read it.
Milanovic is best known for his number crunching, in particular his
great graph of where the money from global growth went between
1988-2008. There’s no better way of showing the simultaneous rise of the
emerging world (mainly Asian) middle class and the global plutocracy,
accompanied by the hollowing out of the Western middle class and the
neglect of the poorest.
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