Such a broad generalization obscures rather than reveals.
For example, An annual income of $3,000US puts someone into the middle class in Indonesia.
This means that the median Canadian income could comfortably pull two Indonesians from complete destitution into the middle class with only a 10% reduction in income.
There’s enough, we need to address inequity.
That sounds suspiciously like you’re saying that the only way to keep life ‘affordable’ for ‘everyone’ is to ensure that some people can’t make it and die from want.
Or if you’re saying it would result in a world in which we are all more less equally poor, rather than one in which beggars starve to death outside the gates of modern palaces: I prefer option one.
Seems like it would take us a whole lot nearer to your goal rather than farther away, yes?
@DavidM_yeg @Bossito @KiffinEileen of course, part of the gap is caused by intertwined self-inflicted harms of systemic #NIMBY-sm and #carDependency, however I doubt that fixing them would suffice to bridge it.
A bit similar thing is with global warming. We by all mean need to stop emit CO₂ ASAP. However that isn't enough, for stable climate, we need to find a way to get it to some 350-300 ppm...
The OP’s point is that we have a consumption problem, not a production problem. In the century we have multiplied production dramatically but inequality grows because we have a consumption problem. And we aren’t dealing with inequality, instead it’s getting worse by leaps and bounds. We could feed and house so many more people, right now, by addressing this issue head on.
@DavidM_yeg The problem here is IMO mixing two things - (primary) resource consumption versus economic output. To solve climate change _and_ global poverty, we need to shrink former while expanding latter at least for foreseeable decades.
Unfortunately most of 'degrowth' discourse doesn't make this distinction either accidentally or by purpose.
@KiffinEileen @Bossito
It seems quite simple to me… we will make the quickest and largest improvements by reducing consumption of the wealthiest, the disproportion is stunning. For CO2 as an example, reductions at the top would produce much needed breathing room at the bottom.
@DavidM_yeg The devil can be in methodology, I hope that IEA does address various gotchas (i.e. my country is IIRC at 12 t/person-year, however if you substract industrial consumption, it drops to 8. And just reducing this industrial consumption could easily mean spawning of the same industry in some country with less stringent regulations - likely increasing global emissions).
Doing this right - with actual results as opposed to just symbols - is tricky.
@Bossito @KiffinEileen
For us here in north America, a place to start is proper functional mass transit, built and mobilized with emergency/wartime speed to replace private vehicles. That, along with properly and aggressively progressive income/asset taxation, and sky-high consumption taxes on unnecessary luxury travel, would be a start at least.
Also, as a person living in Alberta, centre of big Oil&Gas in Canada, where we elected a government that placed a 14 month moratorium on new renewable energy projects but lets refineries to run decades without environmental review … the biggest challenge will be getting enough popular support to move. Inequity is a good way to do that, people will be easier to move when they see folks ‘above’ them making real sacrifices.