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Inequality: IMF Chief Wants ‘Inherent Flaw’ In Capitalism Fixed

  Rising anger at the increasing inequality blamed on globalization calls for a change of directions, acting IMF chief David Lipton said Tuesday. Advertisement But he said, that … Continue reading Inequality: IMF Chief Wants ‘Inherent Flaw’ In Capitalism Fixed


International Monetary Fund (IMF) Acting Managing Director David Lipton takes part in the conference on the theme “Bretton Woods: 75 years later – Thinking about the next 75 years” at the Banque de France headquarters in Paris on July 16, 2019. ERIC PIERMONT / AFP
International Monetary Fund (IMF) Acting Managing Director David Lipton takes part in the conference on the theme “Bretton Woods: 75 years later – Thinking about the next 75 years” at the Banque de France headquarters in Paris on July 16, 2019. ERIC PIERMONT / AFP

 

Rising anger at the increasing inequality blamed on globalization calls for a change of directions, acting IMF chief David Lipton said Tuesday.

But he said, that does not mean there is an “inherent flaw in capitalism,” Lipton said in a speech celebrating the 75th anniversary of the creation of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

While capitalism “has been the engine behind so much of the success we have experienced,” Lipton said, “it is an imperfect system in need of a course correction.”

He noted that much of the anger is because of concerns about the fairness of the system.

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“Part of the problem is the rise of excessive inequality,” he said. “Although poverty rates have declined worldwide since 1980, the top tenth of the top one per cent worldwide has garnered roughly the same economic benefits that have accrued to the bottom 50 per cent.”

Governments should respond by increasing spending to address inequalities, and close corporate tax loopholes and work to prevent corporations from shopping for countries with lower taxes, he said.

The changes from trade, globalization and technology are fueling “rising anger, political polarization and populism,” Lipton warned.

And while allies at the end of World War II gathered at the Bretton Woods conference to create the institutions that would use economic cooperation to prevent future conflicts, “We are at risk of what one could call a reverse Bretton Woods moment.”

AFP