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100 Billionaires Could End World Poverty Four Times Over
By Olumide T. Agunbiade
The top 100 billionaires added $200 billion to
their wealth in 2013- enough to end world poverty four times over. This diverse bunch enjoys a unifying characteristic: Most spent
the year making more money. Their collective fortunes have soared $200 billion
to $2.1 trillion.
An explosion in extreme
wealth and income is exacerbating inequality and hindering the world’s ability
to tackle poverty, Oxfarm warned in a briefing published last
year ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
The world must urgently
set goals to tackle extreme inequality and extreme wealth. It is now
widely accepted that rapidly growing extreme wealth and inequality are harmful
to human progress, and that something needs to be done. Already this year,
the World Economic Forum’s Global Risk Report rated inequality as one of
the top global risks of 20131. The IMF and the Economist agree.
Around the world, the Occupy protests demonstrated the
increasing public anger and feeling that inequality has gone too
far. In the last decade, the focus has been exclusively on one half of the
inequality equation – ending extreme poverty. Inequality and the extreme
wealth that contributes to it were seen as either not relevant, or a
prerequisite for the growth that would also help the poorest, as the wealth
created trickled down to the benefit of everyone.
There has been great
progress in the fight against extreme poverty. Hundreds of millions
of people have seen their lives improve dramatically – an historically
unprecedented achievement of which the world should be proud. But as we
look to the next decade, and new development goals we need to define
progress, we must demonstrate that we are also tackling inequality- and that
means looking at not just the poorest but the richest . Oxfam believes that
reducing inequality is a key part of fighting poverty and securing a
sustainable future for all.
In a world
of finite resources, we cannot end poverty unless we reduce inequality
rapidly. That is why we are calling for a new global goal to end extreme
wealth by 2025, and reverse the rapid increase in inequality seen in the
majority of countries in the last twenty years, taking inequality back to
1990 levels.
Extreme wealth and
inequality are reaching levels never before seen and are
getting worse Over the last thirty years inequality has grown
dramatically in many countries. In the US the share of national income
going to the top 1% has doubled since 1980 from 10 to 20%. For the top
0.01% it has quadrupled to levels never seen before. At a global level,
the top 1% (60 million people), and particularly the even more select few
in the top 0.01% (600,000 individuals – there are around 1200 billionaires
in the world), the last thirty years has been an incredible
feeding frenzy.
This is not confined to
the US, or indeed to rich countries. In the UK inequality is
rapidly returning to levels not seen since the time of Charles Dickens. In
China the top 10% now take home nearly 60% of the income. Chinese inequality
levels are now similar to those in South Africa, which are now the most
unequal country on earth and significantly more unequal than at the end of
apartheid. Even in many of the poorest countries, inequality has rapidly grown.
Following the financial
crisis, the process has accelerated, with the top 1% further
increasing their share of income. The luxury goods market has
registered double digit growth every year since the crisis hit19. Whether
it is a sports car or a super-yacht, caviar or champagne, there has never
been a bigger demand for the most expensive luxuries.
The IMF has said that
inequality is dangerous and divisive and could lead to civil unrest.
Polling shows the public is increasingly concerned about growing inequality
in many countries, and by people across the political spectrum.
Extreme wealth and
inequality is economically inefficient. A growing chorus of voices is
pointing to the fact that whilst a certain level of inequality may benefit
growth by rewarding risk takers and innovation, the levels of inequality now
being seen are in fact economically damaging and inefficient. They limit
the overall amount of growth, and at the same time mean that growth fails
to benefit the majority. Consolidation of so much wealth and capital in so
few hands is inefficient because it depresses demand, a point made famous
by Henry Ford and more recently billionaire Nick Hanauer in his
much-discussed TED talk.
There quite simply is a
limit to how many luxury yachts a person could want or own. Wages in many
countries have barely risen in real terms for many years, with the majority of
the gains being to capital instead. If this money were instead more evenly
spread across the population then it would give more people more spending
power, which in turn would drive growth and drive down inequality.
The top 100 billionaires
added $200 billion to their wealth in 2013- enough to end world poverty
four times over. As a result growth in more equal countries is much
more effective at reducing poverty. Oxfam research has shown that because
it is so unequal, in South Africa even with sustained economic growth a
million more people will be pushed into poverty by 2020 unless action is
taken.
Extreme Wealth and
Inequality is Politically Corrosive
If, in the words of the old adage
‘money equals power’ then more unequal societies represent a threat to
meaningful democracy. This power can be exercised legally, with hundreds of
millions spent each year in many countries on lobbying politicians, or
illegitimately with money used to corrupt the political process and
purchase democratic decision making. Joseph Stiglitz and others have
pointed out the way in which financial liberalization led to huge
power for the financial industry, which in turn has led to further
liberalisation. In the UK the governing
Conservative party
receives over half its donations from the financial services industry.
Capture of politics by elites is also very prevalent in developing
countries, leading to policies that benefit the richest few and not the
poor majority, even in democracies.
Extreme Wealth and
Inequality is Socially Divisive
Extreme wealth and
inequality undermines societies. It leads to far less social mobility. If you
are born poor in a very unequal society you are much more likely to end
your life in poverty. As Richard Wilkinson, co- author of the Spirit
Level, has said, the American dream is more real in Sweden than it ever
has been in the United States. Social mobility has fallen rapidly in many
countries as inequality has grown.
If rich elites use their
money to buy services, whether it is private schooling or private
healthcare, they have less interest in public services or paying the taxes
to support them. Those from elites are much more likely to end up in political
office or other positions of power, further entrenching inequality. Their
children are likely to be as rich, if not richer, than their parents, with
inter-generational inequality increasing .
Inequality has been
linked to many different social ills, including violence, mental health, crime
and obesity. Crucially inequality has been shown to be not only bad for
the poor in unequal societies but also the rich. Richer people are happier
and healthier if they live in more equal societies
Extreme Wealth and
Inequality is Environmentally Destructive
As the world is rapidly
entering a new and unprecedented age of scarcity and volatility,
extreme inequality is increasingly environmentally unaffordable and
destructive. The World Bank has shown that countries with more equal
distribution of land are more equitable and more efficient, and grow
faster. Those in the 1% have been estimated to use as much as 10,000 times
more carbon than the average US citizen. Increasing scarcity of resources
like land and water mean that assets being monopolized by the
few cannot continue if we are to have a sustainable future.
Poverty reduction in the face of extreme wealth will become harder as resources become more
scarce. More equal societies are better able to cope with disasters and extreme weather events.
Studies show that more equal countries are also better able to reduce carbon emissions.
Extreme Wealth and Inequality is unethical
Gandhi famously said “Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s need, but not every man’s greed.” From an ethical point of view, it is extremely difficult to justify excessive wealth and inequality. In fact, most philosophers and all of the major religions caution against the pursuit of
excessive wealth at all cost and prescribe sharing of income with less fortunate members of the
community. For instance, the Koran bans usury and says that the rich should give away a portion
of their money. The decision of Bill Gates and Warren Buffet to give away their fortunes or to call
for greater taxation of excess wealth is an example to the rest of the world’s billionaires.
Extreme wealth and inequality is not inevitable
After the Great Depression in the US in the 1930s, huge steps were taken to tackle inequality and vested interests. President Roosevelt said that the ‘political equality we once had won was meaningless in the face of economic inequality’. These steps were echoed in Europe after World War Two, leading to three decades of increasing prosperity and reduced inequality.
Similarly the growth of the Asian tiger economies like Korea was achieved whilst reducing inequality and meant the benefits were widely spread across their societies. More recently, countries like Brazil45, once a poster child for extreme inequality, have managed to buck the global trend and prosper whilst reducing inequality.
The policies required to reduce inequality are also well known. Decent work for decent wages has had a huge impact. The rise in the power of capital over labor has been identified by Paul Krugman among many others as a key cause of the recent crisis and one that means that assets are not being used productively, in turn reducing demand.
.
Free public services are crucial to levelling
the playing field. In countries like Sweden, knowing that if you get sick
or that you will receive good treatment regardless of your income, is one of
the greatest achievements and the greatest equalisers of the modern world.
Knowing that if you lose your job, or fall on hard times, there is a
safety net to help you and your family, is also key to tackling
inequality. Similarly, access to good quality education for all is a huge
weapon against inequality.
Finally, regulation and taxation play a critical role in reining in extreme wealth and inequality. Limits to bonuses, or to how much people can earn as a multiple of the earnings of the lowest paid, limits to interest rates, limits to capital accumulation are all only recently-abandoned policy instruments that can be revived. Progressive taxation that redistributes wealth from the rich to the poor is essential, but currently the opposite is the case – taxation is increasingly regressive and the poor pay higher effective tax rates than the rich, a point recently highlighted by Warren Buffet among others, who has called for greater taxes on the rich. Cracking down on tax avoidance and tax evasion goes hand in hand with more progressive taxation. Closing tax havens and ending the global race to the bottom on taxation, for example with a globally agreed minimum rate of corporation tax would make a huge difference It is estimated that up to a quarter of all global wealth – as much as $32 trillion – is held offshore. If these assets were taxed according to capital gains taxes in different countries, they could yield at least $189 billion in additional tax revenues.
End extreme wealth and inequality
Whatever the combination of policies pursued, the first step is for the world to recognise this as the goal. There are many steps that can be taken to reverse inequality. The benefits are huge, for the poorest – but also for the richest. We cannot afford to have a world of extreme wealth and extreme inequality. We cannot afford to have a world where inequality continues to grow in the majority of countries. In a world of increasingly scarce resources, reducing inequality is more important than ever. It needs to be reduced and quickly.
An end to extreme wealth by 2025. Reversing
increasing extreme inequality and aim to return inequality to 1990 levels
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