Réformes against inequalities
http://www.karenmillendressesmall.comGlobalization
has reduced inequality between nations, but not within nations.
Takeoff from the South, whose average growth is 5.2% since 1990,
enables them to count for 52% of industrial production and 36% of
world trade. It has allowed the emergence of a new middle class of
a billion people and 28% reduction of per capita wealth gap with
the North since 1990. At the same time, internal inequalities have
widened. China, now thirty years in the second largest economy, is
the most unequal country with Russia. In the developed world,
deregulation and cuts imp? Ts have encouraged a shift in value in
favor of capital which has benefited the most favored. In the U.S.,
the income of the richest 1% increased by 300% since 1980 against
40% for the median, and the pay gap between the entrepreneur and
employee base tenfold.karen millen Same time
have tightened inequalities in status and competence, with reduced
integration and degradation of performance of education systems.
This resulted in a blockage of social mobility. Rising inequality,
acceptable period of strong growth and full employment, the crisis
becomes unbearable and the installation of a ch? Mage mass, which
affects nearly 15% of the workforce in the United States and in
Europe if we include discouraged workers. The c? Tee emerging
countries, the conversion of economic models to the market involves
the development of consumption. The c? Tee developed countries,
austerity and Restoring competitiveness call for social justice,
which is also the best antidote to the changeover of the middle
class, rolled by deflation, towards populism. The fight against
inequality thus asserts itself as a key to the crisis. China has
placed in the heart of its 12th Five Year Plan the soft landing of
its hyper around 7%, the bursting of speculative bubbles coupled
with a more harmonious development of society and territories.
Social movements in favor of higher wages and improved working
conditions are increasing in emerging markets. In the U.S., the
strengthening of the recovery remains subject to recovery of public
finances, which requires a higher imp? Ts (25% of GDP against 35%
in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development).
Finally, the crisis in the euro area, which continues to pose a
threat to global depression, requires a halt to growth in credit to
the indebted states, but also to the explosive divergence between
northern Europe and that of South. SURVIVAL OF CAPITALISM The
survival of capitalism will be universal in its ability to respond
to systemic risks and inequalities it generates. Globally, this
means resistance to the logic of separate development and
protectionism, which would break the global growth and development
in the South, especially Latin America and Africa (5.2% and 6%
annual growth since 2000). Access the 7 billion people on the
planet's resources,karen millen dresses
including the common goods such as water, air, but also information
networks, must be insured. The financial sector should be regulated
- but unchecked - in order to provide the service of financing
activity, including investment and innovation, while avoiding the
reconstruction of financial bubbles and controlled? Lant spiral
hell of private and public debt. Rebalancing the development of
emerging economies towards domestic demand is engaged. In developed
democracies, the reduction of public debt - which is nothing but an
imp t on the poor and future generations - implies lower priority
spending and higher taxes. But the austerity should not eradicate
growth without risking the cycle of recession, and the
impoverishment of ch? Mage, now at work in Greece. The
sustainability of the euro area, and financing of its constituent
States, depends not only controlled? Budgets but also the recovery
of activity and competitiveness of Southern Europe. The fight
against inequality is inseparable from the growth, itself linked to
the modernization of economic models, like the activation of social
policies to break the reproduction of poverty and promote mobility,
primarily through access to Knowledge. Just like Sweden, which
posted growth of 4% and an almost full employment, investing 4.2%
of GDP in research, a budget surplus of 1.8% of GDP after reducing
the public debt 83% to 32% of GDP in fifteen years. The higher the
standard of living and security of nations, businesses and
citizens, the higher it requires their constant reinvention.
karen millen
saleReducing inequalities depends on the ability to reform to
establish a new production standard based on innovation, combining
a social flexibility and security, contracts policies linking
solidarity and responsibility.





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