Difference between revisions of "The one percent"

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(48 poorest countries / 3 richest people)
(top 1% of super-PAC donors)
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This disproportionality is an effect of [[economic disparity]], which has been increasing continuously since the late 1970s when employee wages stopped reflecting continued productivity gains.
 
This disproportionality is an effect of [[economic disparity]], which has been increasing continuously since the late 1970s when employee wages stopped reflecting continued productivity gains.
 
===Statistics===
 
===Statistics===
 +
* (2012 Super-PACs) The top 1% of donors (about 94 donors) give 54% of the money. [http://www.opensecrets.org/outsidespending/donor_stats.php]
 
* The [[gross domestic product]] of the poorest 48 nations is less than the wealth of the world's richest 3 people. ''(from image-meme; source needed)''
 
* The [[gross domestic product]] of the poorest 48 nations is less than the wealth of the world's richest 3 people. ''(from image-meme; source needed)''
 
{{seed}}
 
{{seed}}

Revision as of 13:03, 9 September 2012

About

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The 1% refers specifically to the top 1% of earners in any given economy -- most commonly the United States, but it can also refer to other countries or even the global economy. More generally, it refers to the fact that a very small segment of society owns a disproportionately large percentage of society's wealth, a disproportionality which intensifies as you look at smaller and smaller pieces of the top percentiles.

This disproportionality is an effect of economic disparity, which has been increasing continuously since the late 1970s when employee wages stopped reflecting continued productivity gains.

Statistics

  • (2012 Super-PACs) The top 1% of donors (about 94 donors) give 54% of the money. [1]
  • The gross domestic product of the poorest 48 nations is less than the wealth of the world's richest 3 people. (from image-meme; source needed)
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