
"The Divide" exposes how global poverty persists by design, not chance. Readers compare it to "taking the red pill" as Hickel dismantles conventional development narratives. This provocative counterpoint to Gates and Rosling reveals the hidden mechanisms keeping wealth flowing from poor to rich nations.
Jason Hickel, author of The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions, is a renowned economic anthropologist and political economist whose work challenges conventional narratives about global development. A professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona’s Institute for Environmental Science and Technology and visiting senior fellow at the London School of Economics, Hickel combines ethnographic research with incisive analysis of colonial legacies, economic systems, and climate justice.
His expertise in inequality and degrowth stems from decades of fieldwork in Southern Africa and global policy engagement, including roles on the Lancet Commission on Sustainable Health and the Green New Deal for Europe’s advisory board.
Hickel’s critically acclaimed Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World (a Financial Times and New Scientist Book of the Year) further establishes his authority on reimagining economic systems. A regular contributor to The Guardian and Al Jazeera, his ideas reach broad audiences through platforms like BBC World Service and NPR. The Divide has been praised by scholars like Ha-Joon Chang and Danny Dorling for its rigorous dismantling of myths about wealth disparities, solidifying Hickel’s reputation as a leading voice in progressive economic thought.
The Divide examines global inequality’s roots in colonialism, unfair trade policies, and modern financial systems. Hickel argues poverty results from systemic exploitation, not natural circumstances, and proposes solutions like debt cancellation and shifting from GDP growth to well-being metrics.
This book suits readers interested in economics, social justice, or postcolonial studies. Policymakers, activists, and students will find its critique of development models and actionable solutions valuable for understanding systemic inequality.
Yes. Critics praise its data-driven analysis of wealth extraction and urgent call for systemic change. It’s endorsed by Greenpeace and academic circles for blending historical insight with modern relevance.
Hickel traces poverty to colonial plunder, forced labor, and postcolonial policies like IMF structural adjustments. He highlights how $97 trillion in resources were extracted from the Global South, creating entrenched economic disparities.
Key solutions include canceling Global South debt, closing tax havens, ending unfair trade terms, and prioritizing ecological sustainability over growth. Hickel advocates measuring progress via well-being metrics instead of GDP.
Yes. Hickel calls aid a “band-aid” masking systemic issues like tax evasion and resource drain. He argues aid often perpetuates dependency while ignoring root causes like wealth extraction.
Colonialism’s ecological and economic plunder—from land grabs to slave labor—laid the foundation for modern inequality. Europe’s industrial rise depended on extracted resources and forced labor from colonized regions.
It links ecological crises to capitalism’s growth obsession, arguing that both inequality and climate breakdown stem from systems prioritizing profit over human and planetary health.
Some economists debate the feasibility of Hickel’s solutions, like debt cancellation, while others argue his critique underplays progress in poverty reduction. Critics also question his rejection of GDP-focused development.
Unlike Thomas Piketty’s Capital, which focuses on wealth concentration, Hickel emphasizes historical exploitation and Global South perspectives. It contrasts with Jeffrey Sachs’ aid-centric approach by prioritizing systemic reform.
“Poverty doesn’t just exist—it has been created” and “The global economy is built on exploitation” encapsulate Hickel’s argument that inequality is a political choice, not an inevitability.
With ongoing debt crises, climate emergencies, and populist backlash against neoliberalism, Hickel’s critique of austerity and growth-centric policies remains urgent for policymakers and activists.
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Aid isn't charity but what capitalist powers 'must pay up.'
Europe's wealth was plundered from underdeveloped peoples.
The aid paradigm allows rich countries to pretend to fix with one hand what they destroy with the other.
This story conveniently erased centuries of exploitation.
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In 1949, Harry Truman's speechwriters slipped something clever into his inaugural address-a throwaway line about helping "underdeveloped areas" with American know-how. There was no actual plan, no budget, no program. Just words. But those words birthed a story that would reshape how we understand global inequality: rich countries got wealthy through hard work and ingenuity, while poor countries simply lagged behind, waiting for a helping hand. It's a comforting narrative, one that lets us sleep soundly while children starve half a world away. But what if this entire story-the one taught in schools, repeated by charities, and championed by celebrities-is fundamentally backwards? What if poverty isn't a natural starting point but a deliberate creation?