By IAN BREMMER
February 10, 2014
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The cost of Russian corruption
While Americans complain about the “one percent,” everyday Russians complain about the 0.00007 percent—the 110 oligarchs who own 35 percent of the country’s total wealth. Save a few small billionaire-boarding Caribbean nations, Russia has the highest level of wealth inequality in the world, according to Credit Suisse. And the country’s rampant corruption (note Sochi’s $50 billion-plus price tag) certainly doesn’t bode well for a change in the ranking.
© OECD
(The Economist, Credit Suisse via Daily Mail)
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The Chinese millionaire migration
Countries With Lowest Net Migration, 2012
(NBC News; Global Post; World Bank)
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Momentum for women in Iran
In 1975, barely a third of Iranian women could read. In 2012, more than 60 percent of Iranian university students were female, the literacy rate for females 26 and younger and under was 96 percent and one-third of government employees in Iran were women.
(Alan Weisman via Medium; World Bank)
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Thailand’s bloody ballot
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South Korea’s got its eggs in two baskets
A weakening yen has boosted the competiveness of Japanese car and electronics companies in relation to their South Korean rivals, and both Hyundai and Samsung are reporting significant declines in fourth-quarter earnings for 2013. The combined revenue of Samsung and Hyundai accounts for roughly 35 percent of South Korea’s GDP.
Market Capitalization of South Korea's Largest Companies (in Billions)
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