Business World

World’s 2,153 billionair­es are richer than 4.6B people — Oxfam

-

THE world’s richest 1% have more than twice the wealth of the rest of humanity combined, according to Oxfam, which called on government­s to adopt “inequality­busting policies.”

In a report published ahead of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, the UK-based charity said government­s are “massively under-taxing” rich individual­s and corporatio­ns, and under-funding public services.

Oxfam’s ‘Time to Care’ report also highlighte­d gender-based economic disparitie­s, saying women and girls were burdened with disproport­ionate responsibi­lity for care work and fewer economic opportunit­ies. “Economic inequality is out of control,” with 2,153 billionair­es having more wealth than 4.6 billion people in 2019, it said.

“Our broken economies are lining the pockets of billionair­es and big business at the expense of ordinary men and women,” said Oxfam India Chief Executive Officer Amitabh Behar. “No wonder people are starting to question whether billionair­es should even exist.”

The world’s three richest people amassed a total of $231 billion over the past decade, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg — the fifth-richest person in the world — had the highest boost last year, with a net gain of about $6 billion. Amazon.com, Inc. CEO Jeff Bezos still claims the top spot with a net worth of $116 billion.

The total wealth of the top 20 billionair­es has doubled from $672 billion to $1,397 billion since 2012, according to Bloomberg Wealth.

The world’s 3 richest people in 2019 have added a total of $231 billion to their fortune over the past decade, according to @wealth.

An individual who saved $10,000 a day since the constructi­on of Egypt’s pyramids would still only have a fifth of the average fortune of the world’s top five, Oxfam said.

Oxfam’s critics have dismissed the headline inequality statistics as misleading and suggest that they drasticall­y overstate the scale of the problem. The organizati­on has repeatedly defended its analysis and challenged such accusation­s.

The charity’s annual statistics rely on Credit Suisse’s Global Wealth report, which Oxfam itself said suffers from poor quality of data and may even underestim­ate the scale of wealth disparitie­s.

Citing World Bank research, Oxfam said reducing inequality has a bigger effect on lowering extreme poverty than economic growth. That analysis “shows that if countries reduced income inequality by 1% each year, 100 million fewer people would be living in extreme poverty by 2030,” it said.

Figures from the Washington-based lender show extreme poverty has declined drasticall­y in the past two decades. They show the number of people living on less than $1.90 a day declined by 1.1 billion from 1990. —

Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines