News

The Gilded Age was a period of enormous wealth for some and extreme poverty for others.
At the ACLU’s Civil Rights in the Digital Age AI Summit, leaders convened to evaluate the civil rights landscape of ...
Two trials of subsidised restaurants will take place - one in Nottingham and one in Dundee - as part of government efforts to ...
The 2025 Silicon Valley Pain Index, an annual study produced by San Jose State University’s Human Rights Institute, reveals a ...
Director, producer of The Last Class discuss Reich’s skill in the classroom and his career-long focus on economic disparities ...
The gap between the country's highest- and lowest-income households reached a record high in the first quarter of 2025, ...
Public Development Banks provide affordable financing, direct resources where urgently needed and align funding with ...
Professor Goldburn P. Maynard Jr. of the Indiana University Kelley School of Business discusses the U.S. tax code’s effect on wealth inequality and how race has shaped the distribution of wealth.
But inequality hurts the richest, too — at least that’s what the philosopher Ingrid Robeyns argues in “Limitarianism,” a book coming out early next year.
According to some measures, U.S. income inequality hasn’t meaningfully grown over the last decade, the very period in which it has become such a potent cultural and political meme.
Statistics Indonesia (BPS) reported that economic inequality in West Papua Province showed improvement, as reflected by a decline in the Gini index to 0.374 ...