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Economy Jun 04, 2026

A Vision for Global Justice: How to Create a Prosperous Future for 99% of Humanity

A new Global Justice Report outlines a feasible path to a more equitable and sustainable future whe…
A Radical Vision for Global JusticeImagine a future in which everyone enjoys high levels of wellbeing; where 90% of the world's population doubles their income but works half the hours we work today. A world in which the bottom half of humanity sees its share of global wealth rise from just 2% today to 30%; a world where we consume enough, but nobody over-consumes. And imagine achieving this on a planet that can comfortably sustain human life without its climate breaking down.Against the bleak techno-authoritarian futures now being sold to us, a radical new vision for global progress in the 21st century feels urgently needed. The most credible vision is one in which the habitability of the planet is a precondition for human development and equality.Our new report examines the conditions required for the world to progress towards this ambition on an economically and ecologically compatible path, by the end of the century. Its conclusion? A global transformation that reconciles planetary habitability and high standards of wellbeing for all is possible – as long as three conditions are simultaneously met.The Three Pillars of Sustainable TransformationFast decarbonisation of energy systems is necessary. But we also need a major shift away from overconsumption towards "sufficiency." This would involve a sharp reduction in labour hours and the use of raw materials, along with big changes in consumption patterns, food habits, land use and forest cover. Financing and politically sustaining decarbonisation and sufficiency will require a drastic reduction in inequality of income, wealth and power, between countries and within them.The Global Justice Report is the first attempt to propose a fully quantified plan for this transition. It combines four dimensions that today's debates often treat separately: redistribution at the world scale; a deep reform of the international financial and economic order; a radical transformation of energy systems; and substantial shifts in consumption patterns. Compared with most climate scenarios (including those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), the main novelty is that we model all four dimensions together – and place inequality and sufficiency at the centre of the analysis.The Economic Transformation: Convergence and ProsperityWhat would this transition deliver? At its heart is convergence between countries. Average per capita national income, today separated by a 16-fold gap between the poorest (€290 a month in sub-Saharan Africa) and richest (€4,590 in North America/Oceania) regions of the world, would rise towards a common level of about €5,000 a month in all countries by 2100.But this convergence is not just monetary. Annual working hours per employed person would fall from roughly 2,100 to about 1,000, continuing the long shift towards shorter working time; while the share of global working hours devoted to education and health would rise from 11% to 43%. Women and men would converge on equal pay and on an equal share of economic and domestic labour.These shifts would be financed and governed through new institutions. A global justice fund would spend an average of 10% of world GDP a year from 2026 to 2060 on country dividends and investment, against the less than 0.4% that aid and the combined budgets of the UN, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank represent today. Its resources would come from a world sovereign fund holding 10% of the world capital stock, a global wealth tax rising to 20% a year on billionaires and a global income tax rising to 90% at the very top, each touching about 1% of the world's population.The Environmental Impact: Limiting Global HeatingAll of this would unfold within a habitable climate. Thanks to sustainable convergence and fast decarbonisation, global heating would reach 1.8C, against more than 4C on current trends.The result is not a transfer from many to few but a gain for almost everyone. Close to 90% of the world's population would double their income between 2026 and 2100, and once leisure and a habitable planet are counted, more than 99% come out ahead. The plan also redistributes power. Today, the richest regions hold four times as many votes at the IMF and World Bank as their share of the world's population would dictate; in the new order, every inhabitant would have equal voice, backed by an international clearing union and a new international currency to end the exorbitant privileges of the dominant powers and to address global trade imbalances.The Path Forward: Political Will and Coalition BuildingA habitable, equal and prosperous 21st century is materially possible. The carbon budget allows it and history offers precedents at comparable scales: universal suffrage, the universalisation of healthcare and education, the halving of working hours and the sharp compression of inequality over the 20th century. Technical impossibility is not what is standing in the way, but rather the absence of a shared vision of social progress, at once concrete and radical. What it will take instead is political choice, and the hard work of coalition-building behind it.Our report is part of a broader international agenda for planetary habitability, social justice and reform of the global financial architecture – including the Bridgetown agenda launched by Barbados in 2022, the Sevilla Commitment on development finance, the UN tax convention process, and G20 initiatives led by Brazil and South Africa on global inequality. The main contribution of this report is to place these proposals within a quantified institutional framework, modelling socioeconomic convergence, temperature change and distributional trajectories up to the year 2100.
#Global Justice #Inequality #Climate Change
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Environment Jun 04, 2026

World Inequality Lab Proposes Bold Blueprint for Equality and Climate Stability

The World Inequality Lab released a sweeping report that combines wealth redistribution, reduced wo…
World Inequality Lab Unveils a Comprehensive Plan for Equality and Planetary Survival The new Global Justice Report, produced by the World Inequality Lab (WIL), outlines a set of policy proposals designed to raise living standards, halve global inequality and limit temperature rise to 2 °C. The authors argue that a coordinated shift toward sufficiency – living well without excessive material consumption – is both feasible and essential. Projected Economic and Climate Outcomes of the Plan Income growth: 89 % of the world’s population could see their incomes double by 2100. Climate target: Global heating would stay below a 2 °C rise above pre‑industrial levels. Wealth redistribution: Billionaires’ share of global wealth would fall from 6 % to 0.05 %; the bottom 50 % would rise from 2 % to 30 %. Working hours: Average annual work time would be cut from 2,100 hours to roughly 1,000 hours (about a 2½‑day work week). Dietary shift: Reducing red‑meat consumption to curb deforestation and biodiversity loss. Public investment: Education spending would rise to €8,400 per person and health spending to €14,400 per person, more than doubling current levels. Potential Transformations for Global Inequality and Environmental Policy The report positions its vision as a counter‑narrative to the “far‑right techno‑extractivist” outlook that predicts continued fossil‑fuel expansion and widening disparity. By linking inequality research with climate science, the authors aim to create a political coalition capable of reforming the world’s financial architecture. Thomas Piketty, co‑director of WIL, emphasizes that a euro invested in education or health generates three to four times less material footprint than a euro in manufacturing, underscoring the importance of sectoral shifts. Challenges Ahead and Path to Implementation Realising the plan will require overcoming entrenched political interests, especially those championing low‑tax, high‑growth models. The authors warn that without cooperative redistribution, societies risk “disastrous outcomes both on the environment and on social grounds.” Building a global coalition, securing public support for wealth taxes and re‑orienting investment toward low‑consumption sectors are identified as the critical next steps.
#World Inequality Lab #Thomas Piketty #Global Justice Report
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Health May 18, 2026

Campaigners Threaten Legal Action Over UK-US Drug Pricing Deal

Campaign groups are warning the UK government that they will seek a judicial review unless a new st…
Legal Threats Emerge Over UK‑US Drug Pricing AgreementCampaigners Global Justice Now and Just Treatment have issued a nine‑page “letter before claim” stating they will pursue a judicial review if the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) does not repeal a statutory instrument that lets the health secretary overrule the independent judgment of NICE on NHS drug prices.Statutory Instrument Gives Ministers Power to Override NICEThe secondary legislation came into force last month, granting ministers authority to direct how much the NHS should pay for certain medicines.Both groups argue this constitutes an “unlawful power grab” that breaches the Health and Social Care Act 2012.Former health secretary Andrew Lansley has also labelled the instrument unlawful.Opaque Cost Data Undermines Parliamentary ScrutinyMPs from multiple parties have criticised the government’s refusal to publish an impact assessment of the decade‑long UK‑US deal.No concrete figures on the long‑term cost to the NHS have been released, limiting debate in the Commons.Potential Erosion of NICE Independence Risks NHS Price ControlsNICE is globally respected for its independent cost‑effectiveness assessments.Overriding its recommendations could lead to higher drug prices for the NHS, undermining the mechanism that keeps “big pharma’s overinflated prices” in check.Campaigners warn the move jeopardises patient safety and democratic oversight.Future Legal Battles May Shape UK Drug Policy LandscapeIf the judicial review proceeds, courts will examine whether the statutory instrument conflicts with existing health legislation.Continued parliamentary pressure may force the government to renegotiate aspects of the UK‑US tariff‑free drug export agreement.The outcome could set a precedent for how future health‑related secondary legislation is crafted and scrutinised.
#NHS #NICE #Global Justice Now
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World Wide Apr 24, 2026

Syrian Security Forces Capture Key Figure Behind 2013 Tadamon Massacre

Syrian interior ministry confirmed the arrest of **Amjad Youssef**, the main suspect in the 2013 Ta…
Syrian interior ministry announced that **Amjad Youssef**, identified as the principal orchestrator of the 2013 Tadamon massacre that left at least 41 civilians dead, was captured after a tightly coordinated security operation spanning the Al‑Ghab Plain in Hama.Operation to Apprehend Amjad Youssef Unfolds Across Al‑Ghab PlainThe ministry described the arrest as the result of a “tightly executed security operation.” Surveillance teams tracked Youssef for several days, culminating in a raid that handcuffed him on a street and placed him in a vehicle surrounded by security forces. Footage circulating on social media shows his face marked with blood, confirming the intensity of the encounter.Casualty Figures and Legal Milestones Highlight the Scale of the 2013 AtrocityApril 16, 2013 – Tadamon district massacre; at least 41 civilians killed.2022 – Leaked video surfaces, showing Youssef shooting blindfolded detainees.December 2024 – Youssef goes into hiding after the fall of Bashar al‑Assad.August 2023 – German police arrest Ahmed al‑Harmouni, a known associate.April 24, 2026 – Syrian authorities announce Youssef’s arrest.Repercussions for Syria’s Transitional Justice and Regional StabilityThe arrest signals a potential shift in the new Syrian government’s approach to addressing past atrocities. By targeting a senior intelligence officer, Damascus may aim to placate domestic calls for accountability and improve its standing with international bodies monitoring war‑crime investigations. Human Rights Watch’s recent visit to southern Damascus, which documented execution‑style remains, underscores the pressure on transitional authorities to preserve evidence and cooperate with global justice mechanisms.What the Arrest Means for Future War‑Crime Prosecutions in SyriaLegal experts anticipate that Youssef’s detention could lead to the first high‑profile trial of a senior security official linked to the Tadamon massacre. If the case proceeds, it may set a precedent for prosecuting other figures implicated in the civil war, potentially encouraging further cooperation from foreign investigators and opening pathways for victim‑led reparations. However, the outcome will heavily depend on the durability of the current security campaign and the willingness of the transitional leadership to sustain judicial independence amid ongoing regional tensions.
#Amjad Youssef #Tadamon massacre #Syrian government
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