We have to be careful with the
inequality gap which I agree exists in the West, is widening,
at its extremes, and is troubling, in the West.
Part of the problem is the focus on the extremes. There is little, maybe no doubt that the top 1% are getting richer faster than ever before and the bottom 1% are staying horribly poor or, if possible, getting poorer.
But: while the top 10%, are getting richer, but so are the top 50% and so are the top 90%, maybe even the top 95%. In other words almost everyone is getting richer and richer in both absolute and relative terms. The
problem is that some, a minority, are getting richer faster than the majority and, thanks to modern communications in the broadest sense, we can see "how the other half (only 10%, actually) lives."
Almost everyone is getting richer and richer in the Americas and Europe but, on a global scale, we were all
relatively rich 40 years - two generations - ago.
Circa 1970 there were about 3.75 billion people on earth and only about 15% (almost all in the West) were "rich," relative to all the others. Now, 40 years later, there are 7 billion people (that 7th billionth will be born this month, I believe) but only about 15% of them are "poor" relative to all the others. That's an enormous change of huge, historic social significance. In fact the world is getting more and more and more equal at a rate that is unparalleled in all of human history.
My point? The children,
as I said, are frustrated and disillusioned with a system which they cannot fathom because they are ill equipped to "see" the whole world in any kind of historic context and to ascribe our increasing
global equality to the people who are making the world better and better - the greedy capitalists and global business.