久久亚洲国产成人影院-久久亚洲国产的中文-久久亚洲国产高清-久久亚洲国产精品-亚洲图片偷拍自拍-亚洲图色视频

Opinion

Income gap, a woe for China and US

By Chen Weihua (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-10-12 11:25
Large Medium Small

The United States and China have found something in common lately, after the US Census Bureau announced that last year the income gap between the richest and poorest US citizens was the widest in recent history.

The top-earning 20 percent in the US, those making more than $100,000 a year, received 49.4 percent of all the income generated in the US, compared with the 3.4 percent received by those 14.3 percent Americans below the poverty line.

The ratio of 14.5-to-1 makes the US the country with the largest income gap in the Western industrialized world and represents a growing trend, as the ratio was 13.6 in 2008 and 7.69 in 1968.

The number of people falling below the poverty line last year was also the largest since the US Census started tracking poverty 51 years ago. About 14.3 percent, or 44 million Americans, were living below the poverty line in 2009.

With no quick economic recovery in sight, many fear these trends will continue in the coming years.

In China, the swiftly widening income gap has time and again sounded alarm. World Bank Chief Economist Justin Yifu Lin has warned that narrowing the income gap is the biggest challenge facing the country.

The current Gini coefficient of inequality in China is 0.47, its highest in the last 60 years. When China began its reform and opening-up in 1978 the Gini ratio was just 0.18 percent. The income disparity has widened along with its breakneck economic growth.

The top 1 percent of Chinese families now own 41.4 percent of the wealth, a figure similar to that in the US, where the top 1 percent control 40 percent of all the country's wealth.

In both countries, this extreme concentration of wealth and income is accused of hurting the economies.

Robert Reich, former US labor secretary and now a professor at University of California Berkeley, argued at a recent event to promote his new book, Aftershock: The next economy and America's future, that if a larger percentage of the people shared a bigger portion of the nation's wealth it would help generate more jobs and more economic growth.

The same argument was made by Li Peilin, head of the Institute of Sociology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences who attributed China's low domestic consumption to uneven income distribution. The spending power of middle and low income families is limited by the higher percentage of income spent on education and medical care, while the rich are investing much of their money in real estate, fuelling the housing bubble.

Related readings:
Income gap, a woe for China and US Narrow urban-rural income gap
Income gap, a woe for China and US Government to addressurban-rural income gap
Income gap, a woe for China and US Salary increase guidelines seek to narrow income gap
Income gap, a woe for China and US New norm to better reflect income gap

Though the causes for the huge income gap in the largest developed country and the largest developing country differ, the two countries have seen the same growing anger among the public.

In the US, the widening income gap last year was fuelled by the high unemployment rate, a struggling property market and shrinking but persistent debts, all of which hit low income families the hardest, and the rally of stocks and other securities, which benefited the wealthy. In China, the blame is placed on the decades-long rural and urban divide. Rural Chinese are left far behind in sharing the economic boom.

Among the urbanites, people accuse those working in monopoly industries, such as electric power, telecom, petrochemical, finance and tobacco for grabbing an unfair share of the nation's income. There is equal fury at profiteering industries such as real estate and mining. Of the 400 richest Chinese on the 2009 Forbes list, 154 were in the real estate sector.

In his study, Wang Xiaolu, deputy director of the China National Economic Research Institute of the China Reform Foundation, found that the top 10 percent of families have 65 times more per capita income than the bottom 10 percent, nearly three times the official statistics. The figures, still debated by some, have nevertheless provided a clue to the rampant rent-seeking activities in the country.

China and the US are becoming more like each other in the inequities of society. Narrowing the income gaps would not only air their economic recoveries, but also bring social justice to their societies that are increasingly torn apart.

The author is China Daily's chief correspondent in New York. He can be reached at chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

 

主站蜘蛛池模板: 免费乱码中文字幕网站 | 成人国产网站v片免费观看 成人国产午夜在线视频 | 欧美大片aaa| 久久视频在线视频 | a级毛片视频免费观看 | 国产精品莉莉欧美自在线线 | 神马我我不卡伦影视 | 日韩在线视精品在亚洲 | 亚洲精品亚洲人成毛片不卡 | 日韩在线 中文字幕 | 女人一级特纯黄大片色 | 免费观看日本特色做爰视频在线 | 亚洲日韩视频 | 久久毛片视频 | 欧美日韩亚洲综合在线一区二区 | 农村寡妇一级毛片免费看视频 | 久久九九亚洲精品 | 亚洲国产精品欧美日韩一区二区 | 亚洲精品人成网线在线 | 亚洲综合色就色手机在线观看 | 国产粗大猛烈18p | 99视频在线精品自拍 | 国产亚洲人成网站观看 | 一区二区三区四区国产精品 | 欧美日韩国产成人精品 | 成人三级在线播放 | 久久国内精品自在自线观看 | 精品一区二区三区在线观看 | 国产精品久久久久999 | 日本 欧美 国产 | 黄色美女视频免费看 | 国产一区在线观看免费 | 一级看片免费视频 | 一色屋成人免费精品网 | 亚洲高清色 | 亚洲一区免费在线观看 | 玖草| 99久久精品免费看国产免费 | 国产精品亚洲综合天堂夜夜 | 亚洲不卡在线观看 | 国产一级一片免费播放 |