12_29_09 Gerald Celente on Fox Business; 2010 Market Trends
Monday, March 15th, 2010
12_29_09 Gerald Celente on Fox Business; 2010 Market Trends
www.peopleforfreedom.com
Duration : 0:4:24
12_29_09 Gerald Celente on Fox Business; 2010 Market Trends
www.peopleforfreedom.com
Duration : 0:4:24
Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy
NARRATOR: Globalization did not cause global poverty, but it did make us more aware of it. And by creating a single global market, it raised the question of how that market benefits the world’s poorest nations.
DANIEL YERGIN: We are seeing around the world a movement towards greater reliance on markets, greater confidence in markets. But for that confidence to last it has to be seen that these markets are fair, that they are delivering the benefits widely, that people are benefiting from them. And if they don’t have that kind of legitimacy, then the confidence is not going to remain, and the markets will be vulnerable to disruption and be replaced by other kinds of controls. So every day the market has to earn and prove its legitimacy, and that’s a big test, particularly in the developing world, where the number-one issue, the central preoccupational concern, is the issue of poverty, and delivering the goods means lifting people out of poverty. And that more than anything else is what these markets would be judged by.
JEFFREY SACHS: Professor of Economics, Harvard University: The world is more unequal than at any time in world history. There’s a basic reason for that, which is that 200 years ago everybody was poor. A relatively small part of the world achieved what the economists call a modern economic growth. Those countries represent only about one-sixth of humanity, and five-sixths of humanity is what we call the developing world. It’s the vast majority of the world. The gap can be 100-1, maybe a gap of $30,000 per person and $300 per person. And that’s absolutely astounding to be on the same planet and to have that extreme variation in material well being.
Watch all of Commanding Heights at PBS.org
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/hi/story/index.html
Duration : 0:7:28