Die Tyrannei des Wachstums

Wie globale Ungleichheit die Welt spaltet und was dagegen zu tun ist

Hardcover, 432 pages

Deutsch language

Published March 26, 2018 by DTV Verlag.

ISBN:
978-3-423-28163-8
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Seit Dekaden hören wir, Entwicklung hilft: Die südlichen Länder der Welt schließen zum reichen Norden auf, die Armut hat sich in den vergangenen 30 Jahren halbiert, bis zum Jahr 2030 ist sie verschwunden. Das ist eine tröstliche Geschichte, die von Politik und Wirtschaft gerne bestätigt wird. Aber sie ist nicht wahr. In Wirklichkeit hat sich die Einkommenslücke zwischen Nord und Süd seit 1960 verdreifacht, 60 Prozent der Weltbevölkerung verdienen weniger als 4,20 Euro am Tag. Armut ist kein Naturphänomen, sie wird gemacht. Der Autor entlarvt die Wachstumsideologie und zeigt auf, dass Armut ein politisches Problem ist, für das radikale politische Lösungen erforderlich sind. Voraussetzung ist eine Revolution im Denken.

5 editions

An indespensible book for understanding global poverty and inequality

This book went into a lot of detail, from which I was able to learn quite a lot. It mainly covers the inner workings of the current global economy and answers the question of how poor countries came to be poor and why they will stay poor. In this sense, the book pretty much outdid itself in every regard.

The Divide covers the history of Colonialism and Capitalism as to show how europe enriched themselves by underdeveloping the global south. Hickel takes a look at various sources and historical data to show just how many natural resources (e.g. Gold and Silver) were stolen and the genocide of the indigenous population that followed. Additionally, the author takes a look at many military coups supported by the West and the consequences as such. Hickel goes into great detail explaining how Neoliberalism was born and its first trial in Chile after a …

A brief guide to global inequality

The mainstream narrative, pushed by personalities like Bill Gates and Steven Pinker, tells us that the world is getting better: poverty, disease, hunger are declining, and despite some inevitable setbacks, the trend toward progress is clear. There's only a problem with this story: it isn't true. In The Divide Jason Hickel illustrates the causes of global inequality, from colonialism to military coups, to debt and the present economic system, and shows why the narrative about progress and development is just a delusion. The divide between rich and poor countries is increasing, but it doesn't have to be this way. Poor countries are not poor because of some law of nature, but as a consequence of human intervention. Changing the current economic system to build a more fair and just world depends on us.

Review of 'The Divide' on 'Goodreads'

The Sapiens book for capitalism. The economic history of the last 500 years. Why poor countries are poor and why rich countries are rich. What does the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO do. What's up with all those NGOs in Africa.

These are some of questions this book answers. Other reviews said it feels like taking the red pill and leaving the Matrix; it is exactly that. And the answers will make you outrageous.

Maybe you won't learn anything new; global equality is a major issue and we all know it. But the analysis, the facts, and the details this book presents helped me understand virtually everything about the current global economic system. I now feel much more confident to gauge what any economic policies are about.

Great book.

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Subjects

  • Armut
  • Gleichberechtigung
  • Wirtschaft
  • Globalisierung

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