There is perhaps no better short-hand
description of the economic changes, and political challenges, that have emerged
during the current epoch of globalization than what has become known as the “elephant
chart”. It shows on the horizontal axis the position of an individual in the
world distribution of income (with the poorest people on the left and the
richest on the right) and on the vertical axis, the real income increase
(compared to one’s original income) during the past 25 or 30 years.
It its stylized version shown below,
three points stand our.
Point A is composed of Asian middle
class whose incomes have grown significantly, in some cases, as in China,
trebling or even quadrupling over the period.
Point B—with people richer than the
Asian middle class—shows almost complete absence of growth: it consists of
western working and middle classes.
Point C, the richest people in the
world, have doubled or more their income and wealth. The graph has been
produced in many different forms, using slightly different data, most recently
in the just released World inequality
Report 2018 where the point C is shown to have gained even more than was previously
thought.
But the key message of the graph is a
summary of winners and losers of globalization: the winners are the global rich
and Asia, the losers the middle classes of the West. They are squeezed between competition
and indifference: competition of people who are able and willing to do the same
jobs for a smaller wage, and indifference of their own rich compatriots towards
their plight.
But here, starting from this graph, I
want to move to look at the future. Let us try to imagine how the graph would look
if done in 2050. It is unlikely that the currently rich world would grow in the
next decades at the rates of the Asian giants, China, India, Vietnam, Thailand,
Indonesia. This then means that the Asian middle class will gradually move to
the right in the graph, towards higher income positions entering into the
“territory” currently occupied by the Western middle classes. In the global
income ranking, Western middle classes that are currently placed around the 80th-90th
global percentiles will start
shifting downward, their positions taken by the upcoming middle class of Asia.
Note that for this reshuffling to happen, Western incomes need not decline:
they just need to grow less fast than Asia’s. The Western top of the income
distribution would still remain at the point C although their ranks would be increasingly
joined (as they already are) by the wealthy Chinese and Indians.
What would this slide in the relative
position of the Western middle class mean? To see that one needs to realize
that, from the 1950s to the end of the 20th century, Western
societies (inclusive of their working classes) have occupied the “privileged”
position in the world; they were all in the upper ranges of the global income distribution.
In many European countries with strong welfare states, even the poorest members
are part of the global top quintile (20% of the population).
This imparted some behavioral, consumption
and even political homogeneity to the Western societies. But, were the Western
middle classes to slide downwards, homogeneity would be less. Take one example:
it has become quite common for the middle
or even lower layers of Western societies to vacation in Asia. But as Asia
grows richer, the costs of such vacations will become prohibitive and
affordable only to the rich Westerners, perhaps no less than are costs of current vacations
in Japan. In an interdependent world where lots of income is spent on services,
the consumption patterns may change simply because of one’s change in relative
income position, not necessarily because of one’s impoverishment.
The Western societies will then come
to resemble what we currently see in Latin America: there would be rich people
with incomes and pattern of consumption of the global top 1%, sizable middle class,
but also significant number of people who are, in worldwide terms, relatively
poor, with incomes below the world median. The Western societies will thus become
much more heterogeneous even without a further increase in their own income
inequalities.
This then leads us to the crucial question:
can societies where coexist people with income and consumption patterns that
are quite different be democratic and stable? Wouldn’t such societies exacerbate
the features of what used to be considered a Third World disease, social
disarticulation, with the top prospering and perfectly well integrated into the
global economy and the lower parts languishing and being overtaken by the
middle classes of the emerging economies? This is, I think, the key question that the
politicians in today’s rich societies ought to ask themselves.
(The text was published in French in Le Monde, December 14, 2017.)
(The text was published in French in Le Monde, December 14, 2017.)
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