Belfast Telegraph

World leaders must help poor not the rich

- JIM CLARKEN Chief executive, Oxfam Ireland

HERE’S something we’re rarely told growing up: our world rewards wealth, not hard work or talent.

A world where 82% of the wealth created last year went to the richest 1% of the population. Meanwhile, the 3.7 billion people who make up the poorest half of the world saw no increase in their wealth last year.

Corporatio­ns are driving down wages and working conditions across the globe to maximize returns for their shareholde­rs. They use their power and influence to ensure the rules align with their interests — no matter the cost.

Many of our government­s don’t just let this happen, they actively facilitate it, by slashing corporate taxes and stripping away the rights and protection­s for workers.

Oxfam campaigner­s recently set up an inequality restaurant in Belfast city centre to illustrate the huge gap between rich and poor, as the world’s political and business elites are meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d for four days. In that span of time, the world’s billionair­es will see their fortunes swell by an estimated $8bn.

But we can build a better future, by redesignin­g our economy to truly reward hard work, rather than wealth. What is lacking is political will.

Oxfam is urging political leaders to limit rewards to shareholde­rs and senior executives, introduce a statutory living wage, build fairer tax systems, invest in health care and education and shepherd in a technologi­cal revolution that works for all.

We need business leaders to stop paying huge share dividends and awarding bumper pay packages to top executives until they can guarantee that all of their workers are getting a living wage and that their suppliers are being paid fair prices.

I’m sure every political and business leader in Davos will echo my concerns about the inequality crisis. But I, like hundreds of millions of people, am growing impatient waiting for them to act.

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