Chapter 10: Global Inequality

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Across
  1. 5. the movement (flight) of capital from one nation to another, via jobs and resources
  2. 6. the loss of industrial production, usually to peripheral and semi-peripheral nations where the costs are lower
  3. 7. a pattern that occurs when women bear a disproportionate percentage of the burden of poverty
  4. 12. dominant capitalist countries
  5. 13. the income of a nation calculated based on goods and services produced, plus income earned by citizens and corporations headquartered in that country
  6. 15. a form of slavery in which one person owns another
  7. 16. nations on the fringes of the global economy, dominated by core nations, with very little industrialization
  8. 17. a state of poverty composed of many dimensions, subjectively present when one’s actual income does not meet one’s expectations
  9. 19. the act of people pledging themselves as servants in exchange for money for passage, and are subsequently paid too little to regain their freedom
  10. 20. a theory which states that global inequity is due to the exploitation of peripheral and semi-peripheral nations by core nations
  11. 21. a term from the Cold War era that refers to poor, unindustrialized countries
Down
  1. 1. in-between nations, not powerful enough to dictate policy but acting as a major source of raw materials and an expanding middle class marketplace
  2. 2. the state of poverty where one is unable to live the lifestyle of the average person in the country
  3. 3. the unequal distribution of resources between countries
  4. 4. the state where one is barely able, or unable, to afford basic necessities
  5. 8. a term that describes stigmatized minority groups who have no voice or representation on the world stage
  6. 9. a theory that low-income countries can improve their global economic standing by industrialization of infrastructure and a shift in cultural attitudes towards work
  7. 10. the concentration of resources in core nations and in the hands of a wealthy minority
  8. 11. the buildup of external debt, wherein countries borrow money from other nations to fund their expansion or growth goals
  9. 13. a measure of income inequality between countries using a 100-point scale, in which 1 represents complete equality and 100 represents the highest possible inequality
  10. 14. an unregulated economy of labor and goods that operates outside of governance, regulatory systems, or human protections
  11. 17. a term from the Cold War era that describes nations with moderate economies and standards of living
  12. 18. a term from the Cold War era that is used to describe industrialized capitalist democracies