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11/6/08

EU-Digest-- Poverty and a failing economy is created by the system not the people

A special EU-Digest report

"Poverty and a failing economy is created by the system not the people"

The current financial crisis is a direct result of the utterly unregulated derivatives and other speculation driven markets combined with large scale lending and borrowing which have choked the system to the point of no return. As average income of all economic units are usually equivalent to the average wage of all working people, only a few can draw very high salaries at the expense of the majority drawing less than average. In order to deal with this inequality and the potential opposition to it, the corporate powers developed a multi-layered income structure whereby income can be widely distributed in a trickle down fashion among people, without endangering the income levels of the top 1.5 percent of the people at the top. The ones who control more than 90 % of the wealth.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus says: "Globalization is not working for people who are poor. ... Sometimes, it acts like a 20-lane highway running across the world. But the problem is the big trucks from the USA are taking over all the lanes. No lane is safe for rickshaws. ... So if that image is correct, why don't we have traffic rules? This lane is reserved for rickshaws ... that lane is for heavy vehicles. Today, heavy vehicles are taking over everything. ... So we need traffic rules and traffic police". Today, in globalization, there are no traffic police.

But the system is not only creating more poor people in the developing world. Even the US considered the worlds economic powerhouse has had the most unequal distribution of wealth in the past 30 years. opinion polls show that a substantial majority of Americans say the rich don't pay their fair share of taxes. A growing number also say the U.S. is becoming a nation of haves and have-nots. The public's concerns reflect a shifting dynamic in recent years, as an increasing share of the wealth has gone to people at the top of the income scale. The top tenth of U.S. households now earn an average of 11.2 times what those in the bottom tenth make, according to the Census Bureau. That's up from a ratio of 8.7 three decades ago. The wealthiest fifth of U.S. households now take in 50 percent of all income, up from 44 percent in 1977. The differences are even more pronounced in analyzes of incomes for the top 1 percent of households. Already in 2005 the then Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said: "The income gap between the rich and the rest of the U.S. population has become so wide, and is growing so fast, that it might eventually threaten the stability of democratic capitalism itself." Today at the end 2008 the economic system as we know it is broken on a world-wide scale and needs urgent repair. Bandages in the form of tax breaks or economic stimulus programs, or propping up failed banks just won't solve the problem anymore.

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