
Unequally Poor
Branko
Milanovic: Worlds
Apart:
Measuring
International
and Global
Inequality.
Princeton
University Press £22.95.
How unequal is the world, and is inequality getting worse? Has
globalisation increased or reduced inequality? These are some of the
questions that Milanovic deals with here, but he starts by discussing
how inequality should be measured. Three different ways of doing so can
be distinguished.
The first is unweighted international inequality: examine the per
capita income or GDP of a country, irrespective of its population.
The second is population-weighted international inequality: do
the same, but take account of the fact that different countries have
different-sized populations.
The third is world income distribution: measure the incomes of
all individuals in the world. This last is the most informative, but it
requires a great deal of information for every country, much of which
is simply not available. So it is the first as well as the third
concept of inequality that Milanovic makes use of.
Even then, though, there are varying ways of quantifying
inequality - but the contrasts between Gini co-efficients and Theil
entropy indices can probably be ignored for present purposes.
Between 1982 and 2000, unweighted international inequality
increased, i.e. countries diverged in their economic performance, with
poor countries doing on average less well than the rich. One
interesting way of looking at events is to classify countries in terms
of wealth (i.e. GDP per capita) and compare how they fared between 1960
and 2000.
Milanovic divides countries into four groups in 1960: 41 rich
countries (all at least as rich as the poorest country in Western
Europe), 22 'contenders' (no more than a third below this poorest
Western European country, and so within striking distance of joining
the rich), 39 in the Third World (between one-third and twothirds
as well off as this same poorest Western European country), and 25 in
the Fourth World (GDP per capita less than one third of the poorest
country in Western Europe).
By 1978, only three contenders had
made it into the rich group, while eight rich countries had fallen into
the class of contenders and three into the Third World.
Of the Third World group, just two had become contenders and 14
had joined the Third World. None of the Fourth World countries had
moved into a higher group.
Between 1978 and 2000, a further eleven contenders had fallen into the
Third World and two into the Fourth World. Milanovic gives a lot more
figures, but it is plain that there was far more downward than upward
mobility.
Algeria, for instance, counted as a rich country in 1960, a
contender in 1978, and a member of the Third World by 2000.
Bulgaria was a contender in 1960, in the Third World in 1978 and
the Fourth in 2000.
In 2000 all African countries bar five were in the Fourth World:
Milanovic refers to 'the unremitting downward mobility of the entire
continent', a picture more or less repeated in Latin America.
But of course this says little about the incomes of actual
people, since even poor countries can contain rich individuals.
This is where the third concept of inequality, world income
distribution, comes in. In terms of purchasing power parity, the top 10
percent of the global population receives about half of world income.
Between 1988 and 1993, the poorest 85 percent of the world saw their
real incomes decline; things were not quite so bad between 1993 and
1998, except for the very poorest 10 percent.
Milanovic's book contains a lot more information that we can't
summarise here. While all the statistics, tables and charts mean that
it's often hard going, it certainly gives a vivid picture of the
unequal condition of the world today, and the fact that things are not
in the process of changing.
PB

Land and liberty
Peter
E. Newell: Zapata of
Mexico.
Freedom
Press, £9.50.
The Mexican Revolutionary War which began in 1910
saw political power transferred from a reactionary military
dictatorship allied to foreign capital to the
l i b e r a l constitutionalists of the rising national bourgeoisie.
Z a p a t a supported the overthrow of dictatorship but once this
was achieved his Liberation Army of the South refused to disband until
their primary objective had been fulfilled. That objective was the
return of communal lands that had been appropriated by plantation
owners during the period of dictatorship.
The new government refused to redistribute land and so fighting
continued for the rest of the decade until Zapata's peasant forces, a
people in arms, could no longer maintain a guerrilla war against the
larger and better armed government forces.
Zapata resisted entering the politics of the national government,
though he encouraged the tradition of direct democracy in the
communities he fought for. At the height of Zapatista military success
they conquered the country's capital. When Zapata was invited to sit in
the presidential chair in the National Palace, he is quoted as saying
'It would be better to burn it, for I have seen that everybody who has
sat in this chair has become an enemy of the people'.
Despite opportunity and popular support Zapata refused to install
himself as national president.
Though Zapata's political writings and speeches are restricted to
the aims of the revolutionary peasant army it is thought that he was
influenced by the ideas of Ricardo Flores Magón, a Mexican
anarchist who was then publishing a newspaper from the USA. The
Zapatista slogan of tierra y libertad - land and liberty - was taken
from Magón.
However, the Casa del Obrero Mundial (House of World Workers), an
anarcho - syndicalist industrial union founded originally by
Magón, considered Zapatismo to be reactionary. They opposed the
peasants
politically and militarily until increasing industrial action led to
the new liberal government proscribing the union. Many members
subsequently switched sides.
Zapata did use the examples of the new government’s repression of
industrial workers as evidence of the counterrevolutionary nature of
Mexico's new political leadership.
Zapata is not thought to have been religious, in fact he is said
to have written 'ignorance and obscurantism have never produced
anything other than flocks of slaves for tyranny', but he deplored the
anticlerical
violence of the new liberal government which aimed to reduce the
power of the churches. The banner of his 'Death Legion' depicted 'Our
Lady of Guadalupe', a Mexican apparition of the Virgin Mary, above a
skull and crossed bones.
Since the revolutionary war, inspired by the popular image of
Zapata's heroism and virtue as a leader, rhetoric from anarchists to
governments promisingreforms have invoked the name of Zapata.
Zapata has even appeared on banknotes.
Newell's respected biography does not dwellon personality traits,
military aptitude orleadership skills but describes the material
history that produced Zapata, therevolutionary war and its outcome.
This republication of Newell's book of 1979 begins with a new
introduction which relates Zapata to the contemporary Zapatista
movement, the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional.
The book contains a list of sources, references, bibliography and
internet links and an appendix which discusses the land question in
greater detail.
PDH
Keith Scholey: The
Communist Club
Past
Tense (c/o 56a Info
Shop, 56
Crampton
St., London SE17
0AE),
October
2006. £1.
Stefan
Szczelkun:
Kennington Park
Past
Tense, June 2006.
£1.
The Communist Club was the informal name under which German
Workers Educational Association came to be known. Established
in London in February 1840, as the name implies, the Association
functioned mainly as an educational and social club for German
workers in London. Usually meeting in rooms above pubs, the
Association's first venue was the Red Lion pub in Great Windmill
Street.
Some of the same members were also involved with the Communist
League, the organisation which commissioned Karl Marx to write the
Communist Manifesto in 1847. The reading and adoption of the Manifesto
probably happened at the Club's new premises in Drury Lane.
The Club went on to play important roles in the Chartist movement,
the First International, anarchism and socialism in Britain. In 1903
the Association now at Charlotte Street played host, in part, to the
Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. The main
outcome of this Congress was the emergence of Lenin's Bolshevik faction
within the RSDLP.
The Socialist Party had its first headquarters at the Communist
Club (June 1904 to September 1905) and often held its Annual
Conferences and Quarterly Delegate Meetings there up to 1919. The Club
was
closed a few years later and the building was destroyed by bombing
during the Second World War.
In view of its importance in the history of the British working
class and the Socialist Party, it is to be hoped that a more detailed
version of this short pamphlet will be forthcoming.
The subtitle of Szczelkun's pamphlet, "The Birthplace of People's
Democracy," is something of an misnomer. The allusion is to Chartism.
But the Chartist rally of April 1848, held at Kennington Park, marked
the end of working class agitation for democracy in nineteenth century
Britain.
And this pamphlet contains other contentious statements. We are
told, for example, that "History is not objective truth." Undoubtedly
much history is written from a ruling class point of view, but this
does not mean that an objectively true account of the past is
unattainable.
Presumably Stefan Szczelkun intends this work to be more than
merely his point of view, particularly if he wants to persuade others
about what really happened in the past. We are also told that
"Socialist parties" (apparently including us) either considered working
class culture to be a distraction or were active in encouraging our
members to follow "middle class" forms of recreation (p. 14). Of
course, the author provides no evidence for this preposterous assertion
insofar as it refers to the Socialist Party.
Apart from that, this work tells you all you could reasonably
want to know about the history of London's Kennington Park.
There is much that is valuable in this short pamphlet and works like
it.
Both publications are produced in conjunction with the South
London Radical History Group. It is part of the process of
rediscovering the truth about what happened in the past in our
localities, and forms an
indispensable part of the struggle for our socialist future. Where is
your equivalent?
LEW
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