Imagine the world as a vast Global Skyscraper. In this architectural metaphor, your altitudeβyour command over goods and servicesβis determined by two primary forces: the lottery of birth (your country of citizenship) and the lottery of class (your income decile within that country).
The Anatomy of Inequality
Global inequality is the sum of two distinct dimensions: Between-country inequality (differences based on citizenship) and Within-country inequality (differences among families inside a nation). In 1986, a staggering 88% of global inequality was driven by the country you were born in. By 2008, this share dropped to 74%.
The Great Historical U-Turn
From the early 19th century through most of the 20th, Between-country income inequality rose as Western nations industrialized. However, after 1980, we witnessed a profound U-turn. This decline was largely fueled by the economic take-off of India and China, which pulled millions out of poverty and narrowed the gap between the "Global South" and the "Global North."