Closing offshore tax havens and implementing a global minimum corporate tax ensures that the wealth generated by global trade supports the infrastructure of the communities that produce it. Redefining Success
The gap between the world’s wealthiest and poorest is no longer just a moral failing; it is a systemic risk to global stability. While the 20th century focused on domestic redistribution, the 21st century demands a new approach that recognizes our radical interdependence. In an era of globalized supply chains, digital labor, and shared climate risks, inequality in one region inevitably destabilizes another. Beyond Borders: The Shift in Perspective Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age o...
Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Interdependence Closing offshore tax havens and implementing a global
High-speed internet and AI literacy are the new "land rights." Without universal access, the digital divide will permanently bake inequality into the global economy. In an era of globalized supply chains, digital
Historically, inequality was viewed through the lens of individual nations. Today, capital and technology move across borders with ease, while labor remains largely confined by geography. This friction creates a "citizenship premium," where a person's life chances are determined more by their place of birth than their talent or effort. A new approach must move toward "Global Public Goods"—investments in health, education, and digital infrastructure that benefit the collective human population, regardless of sovereign lines. The Three Pillars of a New Framework
We must move beyond GDP as the sole measure of progress. The "Age of Interdependence" requires metrics that value social cohesion and ecological health. When we view the global economy as a single, integrated organism, reducing inequality becomes a matter of self-preservation. By elevating the floor for the world’s most vulnerable, we secure the ceiling for everyone else.
Developing nations often pay the highest price for carbon emitted by wealthy ones. Financing green transitions in the Global South is not charity; it is necessary planetary maintenance.