The Global 99 Percent
The Occupy Wall Street protesters are part of a worldwide movement against inequality.
By Joseph E. Stiglitz | Posted Friday, Nov. 4, 2011, at 3:35 PM ET
The protest movement that began in Tunisia in January, subsequently
spreading to Egypt and then to Spain, has now engulfed Wall Street and
cities across America. Globalization and modern technology now enable
social movements to transcend borders as rapidly as ideas can. And
social protest has found fertile ground everywhere: a sense that the
“system” has failed, and the conviction that even in a democracy, the
electoral process will not set things right—at least not without strong
pressure from the street.
In May, I went to the site of the Tunisian protests. In July, I talked to Spain’s indignados. From there, I went to meet the young Egyptian revolutionaries in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. And last month I talked with Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York. There is a common theme, expressed by the OWS movement in a simple phrase: “We are the 99 percent.”
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