US Inequality Crisis Worst in Industrialized World. Trump Will Make It Worse.

September 27, 2020 Off By HotelSalesCareers

The United States is already the most unequal industrialized nation in the world, and a new report published on Monday shows that President Donald Trump’s agenda would only make matters worse.

“This inequality crisis is characterized by a situation whereby just eight men own the same wealth as the poorest 3.5 billion people.”
—Max Lawson and Matthew Martin

“The Commitment to Reducing Inequality Index,” developed by Oxfam in partnership with Development Finance International (DFI), uses several factors to “measure the commitment of governments to reducing the gap between the rich and the poor.”

Compared to other wealthy nations, the report concludes, the U.S. is doing “very badly” in the fight against income and wealth inequality.

“The CRI Index measures government efforts in three policy areas or ‘pillars’: social spending, taxation, and labor,” the authors—Oxfam’s Max Lawson and DFI’s Matthew Martin—note. “These were selected because of widespread evidence that strong positive progressive actions by governments in these three areas have played a key part in reducing the gap between rich and poor.”

Lawson and Martin continue:

In the face of these startling numbers, Oxfam and DFI compiled data and ranked countries by how aggressively they are attempting to address these stark disparities. The U.S., the report notes, is not moving with much urgency.

“The USA is the wealthiest country in the history of the world, but its level of inequality is also the highest among major industrial countries, leaving tens of millions of working people impoverished—especially women and people of color,” Lawson and Martin observe.

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT