April 13, 2026
Written by WID.world

The Global Justice Platform: Distributional Pathways, the Global Justice Fund and the New Democratic International Order, 2026-2100

The declining hegemony of existing powers and the emergence of a multipolar world order make the rethinking of global economic governance under climate constraints both necessary and urgent.

A new paper by Philipp Bothe, Lucas Chancel, Jonas Dietrich, Paula Druschke, Cornelia Mohren, Gastón Nievas, Moritz Odersky, Thomas Piketty, and Anmol Somanchi offers one quantitatively and institutionally grounded – if necessarily incomplete – step in that direction. Built on data from the World Inequality Database and new long-run projections (2026–2100), they propose a Global Justice Platform as a policy platform to reconcile global socioeconomic convergence, the preservation of planetary habitability and broad-based political support, in both the Global North and the Global South.

 

KEY FINDINGS:

  • A global convergence scenario is feasible: all countries could reach around €60,000 (2025 PPP) in per capita GNI in 2100, close to current levels in high income countries. Within-country income and wealth scales would be sharply compressed (1 to 5 for income, 1 to 10 for wealth wealth), in line with long-run trends in Western & Nordic Europe.
  • To achieve this, a Global Justice Fund would be established to support massive investment (around 8–10% of world GDP per year between 2030 and 2060), funded by the global rich, via a mixture of a global wealth tax, a world sovereign wealth fund and a global income tax.
  • By cutting across country lines and replacing them by internationalist class lines, the Global Justice Platform has the potential to generate large majority approval in all countries, whether they are rich or poor, high emitters or low emitters. A large majority of the global population would benefit: about 95–98% in the Global South and 85–95% in the Global North would see rising incomes, and over 99% if the value of free time and planetary habitability are taken into account.
  • The transition relies on structural changes toward “sobriety,” including reduced working hours, lower material consumption, and a shift toward education and health sectors, enabling global warming to be limited to about 1.8°C.
  • The platform also includes a major democratization of the international economic and monetary system, including the governance and voting rights applied in Bretton Woods institutions, and ending the exorbitant privilege of rich country currencies.
 

This paper is the seveth and final in a series of research papers and technical notes that will form the backbone of the Global Justice Report, due to be released in June 2026.

 

AUTHORS:

  • Philipp Bothe, WIL (World Inequality Lab), PSE (Paris School of Economics)
  • Lucas Chancel, WIL, PSE, Sciences Po (CRIS)
  • Jonas Dietrich, WIL, PSE
  • Paula Druschke, WIL, PSE
  • Cornelia Mohrenv, WIL, PSE, Sciences Po (CRIS)
  • Gastón Nievas, WIL, PSE
  • Moritz Odersky, WIL, PSE
  • Thomas Piketty, WIL, PSE
  • Anmol Somanchi, WIL, PSE

 

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