Meinung zum Kapitalismus in ausgewählten Ländern

Bei Statista bin ich auf die interessante Grafik mit Daten von 2009 gestoßen. Dann habe ich Werte von 2012 bei GlobeScan nachgesehen. Ein Vergleich der Jahre 2009 und 2012 ist erhellend. In Europa hat insbesondere im austeritätsgeplagen Spanien der Anteil derjenenigen zugenommen, der den Kapitalimus als ruiniert ansieht und ein anderes System wünscht.

„The proportion of Spaniards who now believe that free market capitalism is “fatally flawed” has jumped from 29 per cent to 42 per cent—the highest proportion in any country polled.“ (Quelle: GlobalScan 2012)

Eine Übersicht der Befunde auch bezogen auf andere Fragen findet sich hier; ein Bericht mit den Grafiken hier.

Statistik: Welche der folgenden Aussagen gibt Ihre Meinung zum Kapitalismus am besten wieder? | Statista
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Germany – Chartbook of Economic Inequality

Max Roser gives an „Overview of Trends of Economic Inequality in Germany„. This is his summarizing interpretation of the data, see also his wonderful chart.

Has the dispersion of earnings been increasing in recent decades? – Yes, top decile has risen from 150 per cent of median in 1950s to 190 per cent at end of 2000s.
Has overall inequality increased in recent years? – Yes, the Gini coefficient in 2010 was 3 percentage points higher than in 1998.
Have there been periods when overall inequality fell for a sustained period? – Overall inequality (and poverty) fell over the 1960s and 1970s.
Has poverty been falling or rising in recent decades? – Poverty rate increased from 10 per cent to 15 per cent between 1998 and 2010.
Has there been a U-pattern for top income shares over time? – No, top gross income shares were relatively

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Jeffrey Pfeffer: „Why powerful people are rarely punished appropriately“

Interesting arcticle by Jeffrey Pfeffer: „Why powerful people are rarely punished appropriately.“

„Powerful executives and public figures often face surprisingly few consequences from actions that can cost companies billions of dollars and thousands of employees their jobs. One study of directors found that people who had served on the boards of banks that required government assistance during the financial crisis confronted turnover imperceptibly higher than peers who had served on banks that had weathered the financial storm in better shape.“ (Source: http://jeffreypfeffer.com/2015/02/powerful-people-rarely-punished-appropriately/)

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