Sunday July 7, 7:36 pm Eastern Time
Reuters Business Report
Globalization Has Helped Poor, Study Says

By Jeremy Gaunt

LONDON (Reuters) - Far from creating poverty as critics claim, rapid
globalization of the world economy has sliced the proportion of abject poor
across the planet, according to a controversial new study released on
Monday.
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It says that freer commerce, epitomized by the cutting of tariffs and the
lifting of trade barriers, has boosted economic growth and lifted the
incomes of rich and poor alike.

"The proportion of the world's population in absolute poverty is now lower
than it has ever been," the study, written by a group of respected
economists for the London-based Center for Economic Policy Research, says.

While accepting that there are costs to globalization that require robust
policy making, the study seeks to refute the claims of anti-globalization
campaigners that Western-dominated capitalism has damaged the world's poor
in the name of profits for large, multinational and mainly U.S. companies.

It says that while there has been an increase in wealth inequality between
the richest and poorest countries, this is primarily due to African economic
stagnation, which may not be the result of globalization.

Income distribution between the rich and the poor within most countries is
said to have become more equal, the report says.

Claims by those opposed to globalization that multinational firms exploit
workers in developing countries with sweatshop pay are countered with the
argument that such pay is usually higher than local standards and that real
wages have risen.

The study uses 1992 data -- the latest that was available -- to make some of
its key points, but one of its authors, Anthony Venables of the London
School of Economics, said more recent post-publication research supported
the trend.

CONTROVERSY

The study has already brought a less-than-glowing response from the European
Commission, the European Union's executive body that commissioned the
report.

In a foreward that broadly endorses the report's conclusions, Commission
president Romano Prodi distances the Commission from some parts of the
report, saying it could not concur with all the study's analysis.

"In many respects, the findings will prove controversial, at least to those
outside the circle of professional economists, contradicting as they do
certain deeply held beliefs about the negative consequences of
globalization," Prodi wrote.

The study accepts that the number of truly poor people in the world --
defined as those living on less than an inflation adjusted $1 a day -- has
changed little in the last 50 years in actual numbers. But it says that the
globalized economy has more than halved this number as a percentage of the
world's growing population, from 55 percent in 1950 to 24 percent in 1992.

"Although too many people live in poverty, the problem has proportionately
diminished during the recent era of rapid globalization," the study says.

Looking at the claim that the wealth divide is now greater between rich and
poor countries, the study admits that average incomes are wider between the
two than ever.

But it says this is mainly because Africa has stayed put while rich
countries have grown. Other poorer countries such as India and China, have
grown rapidly, it says, and Africa's woes may not be related to
globalization.

"Whether the disastrous African performance is due to insufficient
globalization on the continent or whether Africa's weak governance, low
education levels and fragmented civil society put the opportunities of
globalization out of reach is almost impossible to tell," its says.


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