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'Inequality Matters' conference puts nations on alert
By Thomas Kostigen,

CBS.MarketWatch.com - June 1, 2004
SOPHISTICATED INVESTOR

http://cbs.marketwatch.com/news/story.asp?siteid=mktw&dist=nwhpf&guid=%7B4299A2CD%2DD4D1%2D4B81%2D89A8%2D63B872F2E626%7D


SANTA MONICA, Calif. (CBS.MW) -- A national alarm will
be set off Thursday. It won't have to do with a
terrorist attack; it's more critical.

Thursday is when the Inequality Matters conference
begins in New York City to discuss the biggest wealth
and income gap -- and its consequences on society --
since the Hoover Administration. The Congressional
Budget Office says the income gap in the United States
is now the widest in 75 years.

While the richest one percent of the U.S. population
saw its financial wealth grow 109 percent from 1983 to
2001, the bottom two-fifths watched as its wealth fell
46 percent.

Alarming? You bet. And here's why: The number of
Americans without health insurance climbed 33 percent
during the 1990's, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
The biggest indicator of a healthy society -- average
life expectancy -- has dropped. People in the U.S. now
don't live even as long as people in Costa Rica.
Meanwhile the U.S. infant mortality rate has risen, so
much so Cuba has a better success rate of bringing
healthy children into the world.

Citing those facts and figures, James Lardner, who
heads Inequality.org, says "there is no way you can
deny the power of money." He, along with Bill Moyers,
Barbara Ehrenreich and numerous other leaders,
activists and institutions hope to bring some of these
startling facts "to the front burner of politics."

In an election year, you'd think these issues would be
on the "front burner" already. But these overarching
social trends reflect poorly on politicians and the
government -- those supposedly elected to protect those
members of society who can't protect themselves.

Indeed, politics, and access to the process will be
addressed at the conference too. "McCain-Feingold is
not nearly as effective as it should be," says Lardner.
The campaign finance reform act he's speaking of is
easy to poke holes in this year, as John Kerry runs
against George Bush's $200 million war chest.

Beyond the campaign, political policy will be
highlighted. For one, the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy
exacerbating the disparity between rich and poor. Even
the wealthy themselves are concerned about the long-
term ramifications of tax policy.

Members of United for a Fair Economy (who include
billionaires and the wealthiest of our country, such as
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett), are calling for the
estate tax to remain, despite its scheduled elimination
in 2010 following phased-in declines. Buffett says the
estate tax helps to keep America's "meritocracy" in
check. Repealing the estate tax could create an
aristocracy based on wealth, he says.

Fighting for attention

The war in Iraq, of course, obfuscates many of these
disturbing long-term trends.

That's why "it's something we have to focus on now,"
says Betsy Leondar-Wright, spokesman for United for a
Fair Economy.

With military casualties and terrorism high on many
people's minds, it might be difficult to shift national
attention. And for that, the Inequality Matters
conference matters.

To be sure, the U.S. economy is rebounding from its
hangover after the boom time of the late 1990s, but
that good news too is reserved for the fortunate
working public. The more unfortunate among us are
becoming even more downtrodden, as higher education
gets further out of reach. (The number of lower income
students able to afford a college education has fallen
sharply, according to a recent BusinessWeek study.)

Instead of putting the nation on high red, orange or
whatever color alert this summer, instead of spending
almost $200 billion dollars (so far) for the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan and sending more than 100,000
young people to fight overseas, perhaps those resources
and that money could be put to use to make us truly a
more healthy nation. Wouldn't that be a more admirable
model to show the world than the Abu Ghraib photos?

A litany of problems

In just 14 days the problems of the poorest countries
in the world -- starvation, lack of education, scarcity
of potable water, etc. -- could be solved if each
nation donated its military spending budget for just
that period of time -- 14 days.

As it stands, the United States and other developed
nations have even fallen below their commitments to the
World Bank, which helps fight social causes like
poverty and education.

Three billion people are living in "poverty" on less
than two dollars per day, 800 million people lack
access to basic health care, 17 million people --
including 11 million children -- die every year from
easily preventable diseases and malnutrition, 2.4
billion people lack access to proper sanitation, 1.1
billion do not have safe drinking water, 275 million
children never attend or complete primary school
education and 870 million of the world's adults are
illiterate.

The toll there is a lot bigger than the casualty count
coming in from Iraq. But it gets much less press.

If the Inequality Matters meeting can articulate just
one message, its title would do.

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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
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sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
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major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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