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Branko Milanovic, the author of the famous “elephant graph,” explains what’s good about globalization—and how to confront global inequality. By Yascha Mounk Dec 06, 2017 7:15 AM ...
As global income distribution has shifted in the two decades up to 2008, the BBC's Andrew Walker looks at one economist's graph that sets out to explain it all - and explains why it's called the ...
These differences are 5 per cent or more per year; they give the “elephant curve” its distinctive shape. They cannot be explained by rich countries’ economic policies alone.
The graph is a real print-and-saver, because even as we debate the sad geography of social mobility in the United States, the true geography of social mobility is global. And it has been a far ...
Look at this chart below. Roughly, that's a chart of how the global population fared over the 20 years from 1988 until just before the financial crisis. On the far left are the poorest of the poor.
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There is, to use the great cliche, an elephant in the room. The room is globalisation, the increasing international economic integration we have lived through over the last few decades. The ...
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