This should be obvious to anyone.

    From a narrowly nationalist point of view, these developments may not be auspicious for the United States. But that narrow viewpoint is the main problem. We have evolved a political debate where essentially nationalistic concerns have been hiding behind the gentler cloak of egalitarianism. To clear up this confusion, one recommendation would be to preface all discussions of inequality with a reminder that global inequality has been falling and that, in this regard, the world is headed in a fundamentally better direction.

    The message from groups like Occupy Wall Street has been that inequality is up and that capitalism is failing us. A more correct and nuanced message is this: Although significant economic problems remain, we have been living in equalizing times for the world — a change that has been largely for the good. That may not make for convincing sloganeering, but it’s the truth.

I don't generally get behind kneejerk anti-Americanism but in this instance it seems clear to me that, having been on top for many years, we were always due to level off a bit as the developing world (slowly) began to gain wealth. This is inevitable and from a non-American, global perspective is a positive thing.


posted 3564 days ago