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10 strategy to address social inequality​

Sagot :

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What are the ways to address social inequality?

Six policies to reduce economic inequality

   Increase the minimum wage. ...

   Expand the Earned Income Tax. ...

   Build assets for working families. ...

   Invest in education. ...

   Make the tax code more progressive. ...

   End residential segregation.

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Answer:

1 Increase the minimum wage.  

2 Expand the Earned Income Tax.  

3 Build assets for working families.  

4 Invest in education.  

5 Make the tax code more progressive.  

6 End residential segregation.

7 was recognized that the sustainable development goals (SDGs) would have to be more universal and more inclusive than the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), to address a wider range of socioeconomic differences around which inequalities had emerged and grown.

8 income inequality has risen in a startling number of countries and is at its highest level in most member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) since the end of the Second World War. Moreover, income inequality has been compounded by wealth inequality, particularly in countries with already high inequality levels such as the United States of America. Other traditionally more egalitarian countries, such as Germany, Denmark and Sweden, have also seen the gaps between rich and poor increase.

9 Economists have been making the connection between globalization and income convergence, and closing income gaps across nations appears to be a clear trend, reflecting the growth slowdown in rich countries and sustained rapid growth in China and later in India. However, the trend is less secure than many had initially envisaged (The Economist explains, 2014). Moreover, recent growth spurts in developing countries have themselves coincided with rising levels of inequality, in some cases as or even more pronounced than in advanced economies.

10Combining these intra/inter-inequality trends is no easy task, though overall, the global Gini coefficient has, on some estimates, dropped slightly over the last 20 years (Lakner and Milanovic, 2013), in no small part because wage earners in the advanced countries have seen their incomes squeezed