The wealthiest 62 people on earth now own as much as half the world’s
population, some 3.5 billion people, as the super-rich have grown richer
and the poor poorer, an international charity said on Monday.
The
wealth of the richest 62 people has risen by 44 percent since 2010,
while the wealth of the poorest 3.5 billion fell 41 percent, Oxfam said
in a report released ahead of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting
in Davos, Switzerland.
Almost half the super-rich individuals are from the United States, 17
from Europe, and the rest from countries including China, Brazil,
Mexico, Japan and Saudi Arabia. “World leaders’ concern about the
escalating inequality crisis has so far not translated into concrete
action – the world has become a much more unequal place and the trend is
accelerating,” Oxfam International’s executive director, Winnie
Byanima, said in a statement accompanying the report. “We cannot
continue to allow hundreds of millions of people to go hungry while
resources that could be used to help them are sucked up by those at the
top,” Byanima added.
About $7.6 trillion of individuals’ wealth sits in offshore tax
havens, and if tax were paid on the income that this wealth generates,
an extra $190 billion would be available to governments every year,
Gabriel Zucman, assistant professor at University of California,
Berkeley, has estimated. As much as 30 percent of all African financial
wealth is held offshore, costing about $14 billion in lost tax revenues
every year, Oxfam said, referring to Zucman’s work. This is enough money
to pay for healthcare that could save 4 million children’s lives a
year, and employ enough teachers to get every African child into school,
Oxfam said in its report.
Multinational companies and wealthy elites are playing by different
rules to everyone else, refusing to pay the taxes that society needs to
function. The fact that 188 of 201 leading companies have a presence in
at least one tax haven shows it is time to act,” Byanima said. Ensuring
governments collect the taxes they are owed by companies and rich
individuals will be vital if world leaders are to meet their goal to
eliminate extreme poverty by 2030, one of 17 Sustainable Development
Goals set in September, Oxfam said.
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