Buzzer
Languidly Clinical
- Oct 1, 2006
- 26,121
The IEA or Oxfam? There's problems with both, but let's see if we can work out which has the larger problems.
I don't follow. Are you saying that the IEA analysis is also dodgy? Regardless of the world viewpoint of the IEA or your opinion of them, I'd say their critique of the Oxfam interpretation of Credit Suisse figures is spot on: Oxfam have extrapolated far too much into what is simple data and completely mixed up the concepts of wealth and poverty to give a very misleading new headline.
As the Adam Smith Institute puts it:
Commenting on Oxfam’s inequality report, Head of Research at the Adam Smith Institute, Ben Southwood, said:
Oxfam’s wealth statistics do not make sense. According to their methodology, Michael Jackson was one of the poorest people in the world, and Ivy League graduates just starting their jobs at Goldman Sachs are in the direst poverty. It just doesn't make sense to look at net wealth without considering the incomes people might be expected to earn. What’s more, it’s not clear why we should care all that much about rising global wealth inequality, when it has come with unprecedented declines in global poverty. Hundreds of millions have escaped penury in India and China, but it is not just there where global living standards have been rising—African poverty fell 38% between 1990 and 2011.
http://www.adamsmith.org/news/oxfams-inequality-figures-dont-add-up/