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Date: Mon, 12 Jul 1999 06:00:56 EDT
Subject: Gap Between Rich, Poor Said Growing
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Gap Between Rich, Poor Said Growing

.c The Associated Press

 By NAOMI KOPPEL

GENEVA (AP) - Technology advances may be improving life for many people
around the world, but they are also widening the gap between rich and poor,
according to a U.N. report released today.

An international effort is needed to meet the needs of poor people in areas
of medical research, communications and information technology, according to
the 1999 Human Development Report.

Researchers with the U.N. Development Program examined income, education,
life expectancy and health care in assessing the quality of life in 174
countries.

Among their findings were that purchasing a computer would cost the average
Bangladeshi eight years' income, while the average American would pay one
month's wage.

Eighty percent of all websites are in English, but only one person in ten
worldwide speaks English, the report continued.

Even in more established means of communications the researchers found a gap
between rich and poor.

In the principality of Monaco in 1996 there were 99 telephone lines per 100
people, while in Cambodia the figure was one. People in Switzerland make an
average of six hours of international telephone calls per year, but in
Pakistan the average is one minute.

``This (technology) is a two-edged sword - it is cutting many people in, but
it is increasingly cutting many people out,'' the report's author Richard
Jolly told reporters.

Jolly said people using the Internet were increasingly young, white, male and
well-educated.

The report also ranks the countries and territories in a human development
index based on real income, life expectancy and educational standards.

Canada tops the list for the sixth year running, followed by Norway and the
United States. The bottom 22 countries on the list are all in Africa, with
Sierra Leone coming last.

The top 20 percent of the world's population earned 74 times as much as the
bottom 20 percent. In 1960 it was 30 times as much.

``The 200 richest people in the world have more money than the combined
income of the lowest 40 percent of the world's population,'' said Jolly.

Globalization did not necessarily make the situation worse, but Jolly said
governments should take into account more than just trade issues when they
consider international policy.

The report says international policy making must balance a concern for
profits with a concern for people who have been affected by turmoil in the
global marketplace.

It is also important to find a comprehensive approach to global threats such
as HIV infection, international crime, human rights abuses by multinational
corporations and transnational pollution such as acid rain.

``The aim is to put human concerns at the center of the globalization debate,
to focus on the global interdependence of people and not just of financial
flows,'' added Jolly.

AP-NY-07-12-99 0600EDT

 Copyright 1999 The Associated Press.  The information  contained in the AP
news report may not be published,  broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without  prior written authority of The Associated Press.



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