ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Brookings Institution
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780815736578
RRP: £29.50
PAGES: 280
PUBLICATION DATE:
August 30, 2018
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Productive Equity: The Twin Challenge of Reviving Productivity and Reducing Inequality
Kemal Dervis
Zia Qureshi
An agenda for economic growth and equity.In recent decades global economic productivity has slowed, while income inequality within nations has increased. The global economic pie has been growing more slowly-and more unequally-feeding the social discontent that is so evident in much of the world today. The contributors to this volume argue that the paradox of slowing productivity growth despite booming new technologies is real, not illusory.Most discussions of these trends in productivity growth and income distribution treat them as separate problems, with independent solutions. This book by economic experts with long experience in studying the global economy and development argues that lagging productivity and growing inequality are, in fact, linked by common causes and must have common solutions. Chief among those causes are the nature of today’s technological changes and the failures of markets and policymakers to keep up with those changes. In essence, the potential benefits of technological change, which coincided with the era of accelerated globalization, have not been harnessed to foster more robust, and more inclusive, economic growth.The authors maintain that reviving productivity growth and reducing inequality are not competing objectives for policy. Rather, they propose an integrated agenda emphasizing the synergistic nature of achieving long-term productivity growth and equity. The authors call for an agenda of “”productive equity”” that highlights the need for innovative policies, at both the national and international levels, that take advantage of the technological changes now reshaping markets and the world of work. Here needs to be changed in CS. They made a lot of changes and I made some changes to their changes.
Kemal Dervis
Kemal Dervis is a senior fellow with the Global Economy and Development (GED) program at the Brookings Institution. He was previously vice president of GED, executive head of the United Nations Development Program, and minister for economic affairs of the Republic of Turkey.Zia Qureshi is a nonresident senior fellow with the Global Economy and Development program and an economic consultant. He previously worked at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, including as director in the World Bank’s Development Economics Department.