#global-disparities

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Europe news
fromenglish.elpais.com
11 hours ago

From the nighttime lights of the rich to the blackouts caused by crises, this is how satellites capture the heartbeat of society'

Light pollution is increasing globally, but some regions are experiencing a decrease due to crises or effective environmental policies.
fromFortune
8 hours ago

How dual incomes and the tech boom turned the upper middle class into America's biggest income group | Fortune

The report contends that the lower rungs of the middle class shrank because more Americans got richer, with 31% of families classified as upper middle class in 2024.
Silicon Valley food
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Two generations are currently arguing about work ethic when what they're actually arguing about is whether suffering should be a prerequisite for dignity. One generation believes it is because that was the deal they were offered. The other is trying to renegotiate. - Silicon Canals

Generational differences in work ethic stem from a broken contract between Boomers and Gen Z regarding dignity and economic stability.
fromwww.businessinsider.com
1 day ago

The 25 countries with the shortest populations, ranked

"Genes don't change that fast and they don't vary that much across the world. So changes over time and variations across the world are largely environmental."
Health
Higher education
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

The Economist Who Wants to Solve America's Wage Problem

Empowering workers and establishing mandatory wage standards across industries is essential for addressing wage inequality.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says people who grew up poor and became successful often can't fully enjoy it - not because they're ungrateful, but because some part of them never stopped waiting for it to disappear - Silicon Canals

Successful individuals often struggle with feelings of scarcity and anxiety about their financial stability, despite their achievements.
Public health
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Young people more likely to leave for health reasons when in low-paid, insecure jobs'

Young people in the UK are leaving jobs for health reasons, particularly in insecure, low-paid sectors like hospitality and retail.
Silicon Valley
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

U.S. and China control 90% of AI data centres - the Global South is building a different kind of AI - Silicon Canals

Frugal AI movements in the Global South aim to reclaim sovereignty by developing independent, low-cost AI systems for critical services.
UK politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Global super-rich may have hidden $3.55tn from tax officials, says Oxfam

$3.55 trillion of global wealth is hidden from tax authorities, primarily owned by the richest 0.1% of households.
Careers
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The most profound disconnect between boomers and younger generations isn't about avocado toast or laziness - it's that boomers inherited an economy designed to reward time invested, while millennials and Gen Z are navigating one that rewards attention captured, and the skill sets don't translate - Silicon Canals

Generational tension arises from differing economic realities between baby boomers and younger generations, affecting perceptions of work and success.
fromFlowingData
1 week ago

Why rural hospitals close

Nearly 90% of the land in the United States is rural and about one in five people, or some 60 million, live throughout it according to the U.S. Census.
Healthcare
London politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

London has England's highest levels of child poverty, data shows

London has the highest child poverty rates in England, with over half of children in some boroughs living below the poverty line.
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 week ago

Minerals for aid: Are new US health deals exploiting' African countries?

In late 2025, the United States shocked the world by suspending global health aid, leading experts to predict 700,000 additional deaths annually, primarily among children. This prompted the US to propose unusual bilateral health agreements with developing countries, which have drawn criticism for being exploitative.
Public health
Left-wing politics
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

How the Battle for Affordable Care Became a Culture War

The Affordable Care Act's passage and implementation faced significant political and cultural challenges, shaping national discourse for years to come.
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

More poverty, less travel and fewer jobs: what the world would be like with oil at $200

Fatih Birol, president of the International Energy Agency, warned that the war in Iran is the greatest threat to energy security in history, with analysts describing the situation as an Armageddon.
World news
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 weeks ago

White Girls and the Global South

Spring offers a variety of art books to rejuvenate reading habits, featuring diverse themes and historical insights.
Right-wing politics
fromFortune
2 weeks ago

Economists agree: You're not crazy for feeling like the rich get richer, and the poor are doing worse. Welcome to the 'K-shaped economy' | Fortune

The K recovery illustrates a growing economic divide where the wealthy prosper while the poor struggle, echoing historical patterns of inequality.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The most expensive thing about growing up poor isn't what you couldn't afford. It's the decision-making architecture it installs, where every choice runs through a scarcity filter that adds cost to options other people experience as free. - Silicon Canals

Financial scarcity significantly impacts cognitive performance, altering decision-making processes and creating a lasting influence on individuals' choices beyond material deprivation.
World politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

We can tell you who will really get rich from this oil crisis and how we can stop them | Isabella Weber and Gregor Semieniuk

Strait of Hormuz disruptions from Middle East conflict drive oil prices above $100 per barrel, generating record profits for oil and gas companies while governments struggle with economic fallout.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 weeks ago

The real class divide isn't between rich and poor. It's between people who were taught the world will accommodate them and people who were taught to accommodate the world. Both are right about the world they grew up in. - Silicon Canals

Social fluency stems from early life experiences, not wealth, shaping expectations of how the world responds to individuals.
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 weeks ago

Poor in an oil-rich country: Republic of Congo's youth hope for change

We are told that the country is rich in oil. But I don't see that wealth in my daily life. Look at Pointe-Noire, formerly nicknamed as Ponton la Belle [Beautiful Pointe-Noire]. Today, the city is unrecognisable. Around the Grand Marche, the main roads are potholed, and when it rains, the streets get flooded, making it almost impossible to drive.
France politics
#wealth-inequality
fromFortune
3 weeks ago
Business

Billionaire says US wealth inequality is 'completely unsustainable as a society' | Fortune

Business
fromFortune
3 weeks ago

Billionaire says US wealth inequality is 'completely unsustainable as a society' | Fortune

The top 1% of U.S. households owns 31.7% of wealth, matching the bottom 90%, creating the widest gap since 1989 while the top 10% accounts for nearly 50% of consumer spending.
US news
fromThe Washington Post
3 weeks ago

One-third of Americans skip meals or other needs to afford health care

Rising health care costs force Americans to reduce spending, skip meals, delay major life decisions like homeownership and parenthood, and postpone retirement.
Artificial intelligence
fromAxios
2 weeks ago

Behind the Curtain: America's next class war will be over AI fluency

AI fluency is creating economic inequality, with experienced users outperforming newcomers regardless of their roles or tasks.
Public health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Millions of children dying from preventable causes, report reveals

Most of 4.9 million child deaths in 2024 were preventable, with progress slowing 60% since 2015 due to aid cuts threatening the 2030 goal of ending preventable child mortality.
London politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Generational divide isn't as wide as you think | Letters

Intergenerational narratives are more complex than surface-level rivalry suggests, with significant commonalities between generations but stark inequality emerging around climate change and economic opportunity.
World politics
fromNature
4 weeks ago

National statistics are in crisis around the world - and the impacts will be severe

Official statistics face a credibility crisis due to falling survey response rates and political undermining, threatening the data infrastructure that governments, businesses, and organizations rely on for decision-making.
Philosophy
Society exists as a real entity distinct from individuals, comparable to how organs form a brain; denying society's existence while acknowledging individuals is logically inconsistent.
Online Community Development
fromNature
1 month ago

Going 'beyond GDP' should not mean sidelining the SDGs

The UN's High-Level Expert Group will recommend development progress measures beyond GDP, with SDG specialists urging new frameworks to build on existing indicator work rather than start anew.
Public health
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 weeks ago

US's new scramble for Africa is biomedical imperialism

US health agreements across Africa demand extensive data and pathogen access while providing no binding guarantees of equitable benefit-sharing or technology access to recipient countries.
US politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Rising anger over lop-sided' and immoral' US health funding pacts with African countries

African countries are rejecting US bilateral health agreements as exploitative, with demands for biological resources, data sharing, and mineral access violating national sovereignty.
London politics
fromwww.bbc.com
1 month ago

Nearly 4m Londoners below income for decent living

Nearly four million Londoners live below the minimum income standard for a decent life, primarily due to chronic social housing shortages forcing reliance on expensive private rentals.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

The difference between people who grew up with money and people who grew up without it shows most clearly in what they check first when they open a menu - Silicon Canals

Childhood financial circumstances create lasting behavioral patterns in decision-making, visible in how people scan restaurant menus—price-first versus description-first—revealing a scarcity mindset that persists regardless of current wealth.
fromTelecompetitor
1 month ago

Closing the global digital divide requires low-band spectrum: GSMA analysis

Spectrum below 1 GHz could significantly boost 4G and 5G coverage in rural areas, according to the report from GSMA Intelligence. Rural areas depend heavily on low-band spectrum because it allows signal to travel further and penetrate better through barriers such as buildings. Rural residents spend twice as much time connected to low bands as their urban and rural counterparts.
Digital life
Artificial intelligence
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Gender, racism and xenophobia: The biases of artificial intelligence in Latin America

Large language models reproduce gender, class, racial, and xenophobic stereotypes when responding to prompts in Spanish, with classism, racism, and xenophobia showing the most striking biases.
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Why inclusion is the new standard for economic growth

In places where inclusion is part of the infrastructure of their economy-supply chains, procurement processes, capital access, or business ownership-people thrive. Inclusive economies create more resilience by expanding the base of potential business owners who can build, own, innovate, and hire. They allow more opportunities for homeownership and investing in the longevity of communities. As our economy becomes increasingly stratified and volatile, we need as much resiliency as we can get.
Social justice
fromFortune
1 month ago

Our K-12 school system is sending us a message: AI tools are for the rich kids | Fortune

Whenever I made my initial rounds at a school, a quick peek at its technological resources was often a reliable predictor of its ability to meet students' broad needs. The differences in the quality and volume of computing labs at a school like Lincoln Park High School on Chicago's wealthy north side, where the local population is 75% white, versus Raby High School, located in economically distressed East Garfield Park which is 83% Black, were stark.
Education
Major League Baseball
fromTalkNats.com
1 month ago

It's all about the money..... and the lack thereof! | TalkNats.com

MLB's revenue-sharing model and absence of a salary cap produce low profitability, encourage cost-minimizing ownership, and require CBA reforms for competitive balance.
Miscellaneous
fromPrx
1 month ago

The World

Marco Rubio received a standing ovation at Munich; Denmark updated conscription; Americas' last prison island became a tourist bioreserve; Winter Olympics update featured Sarah Spain.
History
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

How America Got So Sick

The Antonine Plague, likely smallpox, killed over a million across the Roman Empire and contributed to systemic crises that hastened Rome's decline.
fromeLearning Industry
2 months ago

The Global Shift Toward Sustainable Learning Cultures-And Why These Organizations Feel Behind

Learning today doesn't usually look broken. It looks like a well-run treadmill, always on, always moving, quietly exhausting everyone. New initiatives, new tools, new priorities. New "must-have" skills. Even when learning is thoughtfully designed, there's a nagging sense that nothing sticks because nothing gets a chance to. People finish the course, grab the badge, and move on to the next thing before the last thing has had time to show up in how they work.
Online learning
fromEntrepreneur
2 months ago

Why Global Brands Struggle When Local Markets Push Back

Companies enter new markets with momentum. Press coverage looks promising. Campaigns launch on schedule. Local teams are hired. Early dashboards suggest traction. Then progress slows. Customer interest plateaus. Partnerships take longer than expected. Internally, the conversation almost always turns to execution. Messaging must not be clear enough. The market probably needs more education. What I have learned is that this conclusion is usually wrong. What looks like market resistance is more often a signal that the brand is communicating from the wrong position.
Venture
Real estate
fromFortune
1 month ago

We may be looking at the housing affordability crisis all wrong. Higher earners are driving home prices, not lack of supply, researchers say | Fortune

Housing affordability is driven more by income and demand dynamics—especially population-driven demand—than by housing supply constraints.
Fundraising
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

ActionAid to rethink child sponsorship as part of plan to decolonise' its work

Child sponsorship models can be racialised and paternalistic; ActionAid UK will transform funding toward community-shaped, decolonised partnerships emphasizing solidarity and women's rights funding.
Relationships
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

I Know My Best Friend Isn't a Charity Case. But I Still Want to Give Her My Extra Cash.

Offer financial help transparently and respectfully: ask permission, discuss needs and boundaries, and provide sustainable support without stigma or unsolicited gifts.
Environment
fromFuturism
2 months ago

The Richest 1 Percent Burned Their Entire Share of Carbon for the Year in Just 10 Days

The richest 1% exhausted their fair share of the global carbon budget within 10 days and must cut emissions 97% by 2030 to meet 1.5°C.
Medicine
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

In America, Fake Patients Get the Best Care

Standardized patients role-play diverse illnesses so medical students can practice clinical skills, examinations, counseling, and diagnostics in realistic, unhurried encounters.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Quarter of developing countries poorer than in 2019, World Bank finds

A quarter of countries in the developing world are poorer than they were in 2019 before the Covid pandemic, the World Bank has found. The Washington-based organisation said a large group of low-income countries, many in sub-Saharan Africa, had suffered a negative shock in the six years to the end of last year. The bank said global growth had downshifted since the pandemic, and the pace was now insufficient to reduce extreme poverty and create jobs where they're needed most.
World news
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Food Insecurity Is a Workplace Issue

Food insecurity raises employee anxiety, reducing attention and causing lower task performance and engagement; alleviating food insecurity improves engagement.
Online learning
fromeLearning Industry
1 month ago

Low-Bandwidth Learning Design For Global Audiences

Design eLearning for low-bandwidth contexts to ensure inclusive, effective learning by prioritizing outcomes and optimizing media for constrained connectivity.
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Nearly 23 million extra deaths worldwide by 2030 as aid cuts bite, study says

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground.
US politics
Business
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Who Can Afford to Spend Money?

Rising inequality and job losses increase consumer psychological stress and threaten a consumer-dependent economy unless individuals build financial resilience, community solidarity, and empathy.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

8 things lower-middle-class people do to feel safe that wealthy people don't even think about - Silicon Canals

Growing up outside Manchester, I remember watching my mum count out exact change at the supermarket checkout, keeping a running total in her head as she shopped. Meanwhile, my university roommate would just toss things in his trolley without a second thought. That's when it hit me: Financial security isn't just about having money. It's about the mental space that money creates.
Mental health
fromThe Globe and Mail
2 months ago

Business Brief: Heralding the age of Western decline

U.S. President Donald Trump, with his lust for Greenland and hectoring of Europe, thinks the world is at his mercy,and thatthe U.S. is invincible. He's right on the first point. But he discovered this week that he's wrong about the second one. In Davos at the World Economic Forum, Trump climbed down on his Greenland threats after his actions caused chaos in the markets.
World news
Business
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Inequality and location, location, location - Harvard Gazette

Geography significantly shapes housing and labor market outcomes, influencing wages, location choices, rent control effects, and demographic-driven economic dynamics.
World news
fromPrx
2 months ago

The World

EU leaders react cautiously to US actions; Iran cuts internet amid protests; push to return US oil firms to Venezuela; twin gorillas born in DRC.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Health Care Empathy Dilemma

Different empathy types affect caregivers differently: compassion empathy protects against burnout while contagion empathy increases burnout risk by merging others' emotions.
fromEmptywheel
2 months ago

It's the Inequality, Stupid: Why Test, Trace, Isolate Won't Stop Covid-19 in America

Everything is changing, and in the face of that, America is failing. Over 90,000 souls have paid for our failing. Millions more are living in terror for their livelihoods and their families. But Covid-19 isn't a technology problem, or a science question, or a supply chain issue, or even a question of doctoring. This challenge is public health, and that is something we've been failing at for a damn long time.
fromComputerworld
2 months ago

Global AI adoption is growing, and so is the digital divide

despite one person in six now using generative AI (genAI) tools, there exists what it described as a "widening divide." The adoption rate in nations that are situated in the region known as the Global North, a term used for developed nations regardless of their geographic location, is at 24.7% of the working age population, far higher than the 14.1% figure in the Global South, those countries either under development or least developed.
Artificial intelligence
Business
from24/7 Wall St.
2 months ago

Why Half the World's Market Value Sits Outside Your Portfolio Right Now

SCHF delivers low-cost, diversified developed-market equity exposure outside the U.S., covering ~1,300 companies with a 0.03% expense ratio and a 2.35% dividend yield.
World news
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

Billionaires have more money and political power than ever, Oxfam says

Superrich individuals increasingly concentrate wealth, political influence, and media ownership, intensifying global inequality and undermining poverty reduction efforts.
fromFortune
1 month ago

Patient private capital is needed to help Asia plug its healthcare gaps | Fortune

Asia's healthcare challenges include aging populations, rising disease, and strained infrastructure, but the crisis is better understood at the kitchen table, where families decide what conditions to treat, and what to ignore, according to their savings. While the APAC region makes up 60% of the world's population, the region accounts for a mere 22% of global healthcare spending. According to the World Health Organization, most developing Asian countries spend just 2-3% of GDP on health, and in many cases public
Public health
Business
fromHarvard Business Review
2 months ago

For Multinational Companies, Localization Matters More Than Ever

Global companies must localize core operations, duplicating supply chains and integrating regional suppliers to meet data-sovereignty and local sourcing mandates, sacrificing scale for resilience.
World news
fromPrx
2 months ago

The World

India and the EU signed a trade deal covering a quarter of world GDP; Europe also faces immigration policy shifts, geopolitical tensions over Greenland, and space-debris impacts near Point Nemo.
#global-health
Artificial intelligence
fromFortune
2 months ago

While elites debate geopolitics, Americans are rethinking college in the search for economic mobility | Fortune

AI is actively transforming labor markets, prompting American workers to adapt as automation threatens roughly 25% of US and European work hours.
World news
fromPrx
1 month ago

The World

Multiple international events unfolded, including high-level security talks in Munich, a decisive Bangladesh election result, Gaza school reopenings, and planned Kenya-Somalia checkpoint reopenings.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Understanding and Addressing Limited Health Literacy

Adult literacy advocate Toni Cordell recounts the story of feeling comforted when her doctor told her that her medical concern could be solved with an easy surgery. She agreed to proceed without asking further questions and didn't understand the medical consent forms because she didn't read well. At a follow-up office visit a couple of weeks after the procedure, Cordell was shocked when the nurse asked, "How are you feeling since your hysterectomy?"
Public health
Public health
fromwww.dw.com
2 months ago

Inside the Philippines' struggle for rural healthcare

Rural doctors in Jalajala face scarce resources, transport and water shortages, and patients delaying or abandoning treatment, leading to preventable disease and poor outcomes.
from48 hills
2 months ago

The US fails again to fix the real causes underlying poor health - 48 hills

If you're smoking three packs of cigarettes a day, should you expect society to pay when you get sick?" He added that while Americans would always have the right to "eat donuts all day," nevertheless, "should you then expect society to care for you when you predictably get very sick at the same level as somebody who was born with a congenital illness?
Public health
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