Top economists call on world leaders to set up an international panel on inequality

As the G20 prepares to discuss global inequality, prominent economists are calling for a dedicated international panel, arguing that unchecked wealth gaps are undermining stability and trust.
Hundreds of top economists and other experts, including former US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, called on Friday for the world to set up an independent international panel on income and wealth inequality.
The call in an open letter came before the Group of 20 summit in South Africa next weekend, when a report on global inequality, chaired by Nobel Prize-winning American economist Joseph Stiglitz, is due to be presented to world leaders.
That report, which was released this month, said that the world is facing an inequality emergency as well as a climate emergency, leading to more political instability and conflicts, and “decreased confidence in democracy”.
The report recommended a new International Panel on Inequality to advise governments on how to address the issue in the same way the UN-appointed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change does to help develop climate policies.
The economists and inequality experts, which include Nobel laureates and former senior officials at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, said in their letter addressed to world leaders that they were concerned “that extreme concentrations of wealth translate into undemocratic concentrations of power, unravelling trust in our societies and polarising our politics”.
South Africa, which hosts the G20 summit on 22-23 November, wants global inequality to be one of its main topics, even as South Africa itself is ranked as the most unequal country in the world by the World Bank.
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