Like a Candy Bar with Rules
In this big candy bar game, some people get lots of candies because they have special rules or tools, like getting extra scoops from a bigger bowl. These are the rich countries, who have more money and power. Other kids only get small bits of candy, these are the poor countries, who don’t have as many resources.
The Game Gets Tired
But here’s the catch: when some people take way too much candy, it makes the candy bar run out faster than it should. That’s what happens in our world, we’re using up things like water and forests so fast that the planet can't keep giving us all that candy forever.
It's like playing a game with rules that don’t work for everyone, and now we're all running out of candy before the game is even over!
Examples
- A rich person buys a mansion while others live in tiny apartments.
- Some countries get most of the world's resources, while others struggle.
- Kids in wealthy areas go to better schools than kids in poor ones.
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See also
- Why Are Some Countries Rich and Others Poor?
- Can the economy grow forever?
- Does the rise of electric vehicles risk entrenching inequality?
- Could The Whole World Use Just One Currency?
- How Does $200 Oil. The World Economy is OBLITERATED Work?