Growth is failing the poor : the unbalanced distribution of the benefits and costs of global economic growth / David Woodward and Andrew Simms
2006
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Symbol
ST/ESA/2006/DWP/20
Title
Growth is failing the poor : the unbalanced distribution of the benefits and costs of global economic growth / David Woodward and Andrew Simms
Access
Full text: wp20_2006 - PDF ;
Summary
During 1990-2001, only 0.6 per cent of additional global income per capita contributed to reducing poverty below the $1-a-day line, down from 2.2 per cent during 1981-1990, and barely half the poor’s share of global income. Coupled with the constraints on global growth associated with climate change, and the disproportionately adverse net impact of climate change on the poor, this casts serious doubt on the dominant view that global growth should be the primary means of poverty reduction. Rather than growth, policies and the global economic system should focus directly on achieving social and environmental objectives.
The growth dilemma: poverty reduction versus the environment? -- Who’s costing the earth, and who’s paying the price? -- Finding the right question -- Economic growth: the wrong measure -- Growth and distribution: a comparison -- Policy implications -- Conclusion.
The growth dilemma: poverty reduction versus the environment? -- Who’s costing the earth, and who’s paying the price? -- Finding the right question -- Economic growth: the wrong measure -- Growth and distribution: a comparison -- Policy implications -- Conclusion.
Call number
ST/DESA(05)/D62/no.20
Internet
Internet
Series
Date
[New York] : UN Dept. of Economic and Social Affairs, Mar. 2006
Description
21 p. : graphs, tables
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 20-21).