this is interesting. the drivers of globalization are corporations. corporations are becoming the world powers (if they are not already the world powers) > government. "corporations" want to control the world's wealth and resources, and to thus control the world. i generally think of corporations as run by either a rather ethical group of individuals, or by a corrupt group of individuals who like to hoard power, money and resources. this latter case i suspect is way more common than the former. i don't really know how to change this in a way that will best benefit the most people and the world at large. we "vote" for corporations by buying their stuff and increasingly, it's getting harder and harder to get by without doing that. (not that i've ever tried to... i pondered researching corporations and their products so i can vote appropriately but it would be a lot of work especially considering how they aren't always terribly transparent about their activities--to understate it.)The report says this development coincides with a retreat from globalisation in 1914-70. As globalisation ebbed, it argues, rich countries had more freedom to steer domestic policies and used it to narrow differences between rich and poor. As globalisation spread again after 1980, the opposite happened: “globalisation contributed to higher income inequality within countries,” the report concludes, “while at the same time leading to a decline of income inequality between countries.”