The wealth of the world’s 10 richest men doubled in the pandemic, Oxfam says
The wealth of the 10 richest men has doubled during the
coronavirus pandemic, stoking inequality that contributes to the deaths of at
least 21,300 people each day, according to a report released on Monday by Oxfam
International.
“We enter 2022 with unprecedented concern,” Oxfam’s
Inequality Kills report warns, arguing that the current global state of extreme
inequality is a form of “economic violence” against the world’s poorest people
and nations.
In this deeply unequal world, structural and systemic policy
and political choices are skewed in favour of the richest and most powerful,
resulting in harm to the majority of ordinary people around the world, said the
report, which highlighted the COVID-19 vaccine divide as a prime example.
“Millions of people would still be alive today if they had
had a vaccine — but they are dead, denied a chance while big pharmaceutical
corporations continue to hold monopoly control of these technologies,” said
Oxfam.
The report calculates that 252 men have more wealth than all
one billion women and girls in Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean
combined. And 10 of the world’s richest men own more than the least affluent
3.1 billion people.
Moreover, while the rich got a whole lot richer during the
pandemic, the incomes of 99 percent of humanity suffered.
Oxfam’s report is usually released prior to the World
Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland – but the gathering
of the world’s richest and most powerful has been postponed again this year due
to the pandemic.
Last week, WEF released its Global Risks Report 2022 (PDF)
warning that the lopsided economic recovery from the coronavirus, much of which
has relied on the roll-out of vaccinations, has deepened divisions within and
between nations.
It also stressed that growing inequality, made worse by the
pandemic, is sure to cause additional tensions, resentments and further
complicate nations’ responses to climate change, economic disparities, and social
instabilities.
What went wrong?
Despite efforts by the United Nations and governments over
the last several decades to tackle poverty and more evenly distribute
technology and access to education, the world has been heading towards severe
inequality for decades.
“These present-day divides are directly linked to historical
legacies of racism, including slavery and colonialism,” the Oxfam report said.
The report notes that since 1995, the world’s top one-percenters have captured nearly 20 times more of global wealth than the bottom 50 percent. And the pandemic has made things much worse.
Low-interest rates and government stimulus designed to help
economies recover from 2020’s COVID-19 blow have also stoked prices for stocks
and other assets, making the wealthy even wealthier.
“The trillions poured into financial markets by central
banks to save the economy have led to an explosion in billionaire wealth – it
is the biggest increase in history – while the pandemic has left ordinary
people poorer than they would have been if it had never happened,” Gabriela
Bucher, executive director of Oxfam, told Al Jazeera.
Wealth inequality does not just harm people. It hurts the
planet as well. Twenty of the richest billionaires are estimated to be emitting
as much as 8,000 times more carbon than the billion poorest people, according
to Oxfam.
Vaccine equity & taxing the super-rich
People who live in low-and-middle-income countries are
around twice as likely to die from COVID-19 infection as people who live in
rich countries, according to research cited by Oxfam.
In some countries, the poorest people are nearly four times
more likely to die from COVID-19, Oxfam says.
“Many have lost their jobs and millions have lost their
lives. Women, racialized groups and citizens of the Global South are the hardest
hit,” Bucher told Al Jazeera.
Oxfam argues that governments have the power to radically
change course and blunt “economic violence” at its roots by laying the
foundation for a more equal world.
A good start, it says, is to impose a one-off windfall tax
on the COVID-19 gains of the 10 richest men, which would generate $812bn,
according to the report.
“We need to claw back this incredible billionaire bonanza
with new wealth and capital taxes. It is simple, common sense: tax the
super-rich and spend the money on nurses, on hospitals and on vaccines,” Bucher
told Al Jazeera. (Aljazeera)
According to Forbes figures cited by the charity, the
world’s 10 richest men are:
Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Bernard Arnault and family, Bill
Gates, Larry Ellison, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Ballmer
and Warren Buffet.
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