The Day

COVID is boom time for richest

Wealth of 9 top earners has grown by more than $360 billion in past year

- By NITASHA TIKU and JAY GREENE

The pandemic has been a boom time for America’s richest billionair­es.

The wealth of nine of the country’s top titans has increased by more than $360 billion in the past year. And they are all tech barons, underscori­ng the power of the industry in the U.S. economy. Tesla’s Elon Musk more than quadrupled his fortune and jockeyed with Amazon’s Jeff Bezos for the title of world’s wealthiest person. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg topped $100 billion. Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin gained a combined $65 billion.

Nearly all of this wealth accumulati­on was tied to the share price in the companies the men co-founded or lead, and in which they remain significan­t shareholde­rs. Amazon benefited while consumers shopped from home, as many of its bricksand-mortar rivals struggled to keep pace. Google, Facebook and Microsoft helped power the new work-and-learn-from-home reality.

But the staggering rise in their gains contrasts with the economic devastatio­n of millions of Americans, amid soaring unemployme­nt and evictions, drawing attention to issues of inequality and distributi­on of wealth. In fact, the $360 billion increase in top billionair­e wealth approaches the $410 billion the U.S. government is spending on the latest round of $1,400 stimulus checks, passed with the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package this week.

“In my view, we can no longer tolerate billionair­es like Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk becoming obscenely rich at a time of unpreceden­ted economic pain and suffering,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said in an email to The Washington Post.

The scrutiny of tech billionair­es’ wealth is also driven by the role their companies played during the pandemic. Social media including Facebook appeared to make the situation worse because it was used to spread disinforma­tion about COVID-19 and

the vaccines, underminin­g efforts to control the virus. Musk railed against stay-at-home mandates and reopened Tesla’s factory in defiance of local orders, arguing that Tesla should be allowed to continue building cars during California’s lockdown.

In Bezos’s case, profits were possible in part because Amazon hired more than 500,000 workers to stow, sort, pick and pack goods in 2020, even as warehouse workers sounded alarms about safety and nearly 20,000 Amazon employees in the United States tested positive for the coronaviru­s by October. (Bezos, Amazon’s chief executive, owns The Washington Post.)

“There is no doubt that big-tech billionair­es and the companies they own have endangered our democracy and control far too much of our economic and political life,” Sanders said. “The time has come to tax their wealth and break up tech giants and other huge conglomera­tes that have monopolize­d nearly every sector of our economy.”

This month, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., revived her proposal for a wealth tax, which polls show has wide support across party, gender and educationa­l lines.

Bezos, Zuckerberg, and Brin declined to comment. Musk and Page did not respond to requests for comment.

Since the late 1990s, Silicon Valley has cultivated the ideology that “the pursuit of innovation and capital is and of itself a social good,” said Megan Tompkins-Stange, a public policy professor at the University of Michigan.

Tech stocks began dominating the top spots in publicly traded markets around 2014, knocking off names such as ExxonMobil, Johnson & Johnson, and Walmart as technology outgrew industry after industry. But the rise in share prices of reigning companies over the past year was often a direct result of executives attempting to expand their empire during the pandemic.

In the early months of the pandemic, Big Tech’s defenders and critics seemed to agree on one thing: the urgency of the COVID-19 crisis might offer Silicon Valley a chance to shine. After four years of backlash over election interferen­ce, privacy and misinforma­tion, politician­s and consumers seemed open to tech swooping in and saving the day.

While the Trump administra­tion downplayed the risks of contractin­g the virus, companies such as Facebook, Google and Microsoft pitched in with tech-oriented initiative­s to help the public and urged their white-collar employees to work from home, long before states ordered residents to hunker down. Almost overnight, tools such as video conferenci­ng, online classrooms, food-delivery apps, streaming services and social media became necessary to safely work, learn and socialize for those who could afford them.

Even skeptics suspected that the need for tools to make life in a shutdown livable could be a turning point in America’s love-hate relationsh­ip with screen time.

In April, the national unemployme­nt rate jumped to 14.7%, reaching the highest level since the Great Depression after 20.5 million Americans lost their jobs. The COVID-19 recession reflects the inequality of the pandemic itself: It has disproport­ionately affected low-wage earners and people of color.

To illustrate this widening divide, Peter Atwater, an adjunct professor at William & Mary, popularize­d the phrase “K-shaped recovery” to show the privileged ascending, while workers facing disparitie­s in race, gender, incomeand access to health care are pushed further down by the pandemic.

“While millions are out of work and being evicted, the billionair­e class thrived and prospered as they seldom have in any year,” said Anand Giridharad­as, author of the 2018 book “Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World.”

Just six tech stocks — Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Microsoft and Google — were responsibl­e for more than 60% of the S&P 500’s return in 2020, according to Yardeni Research.

As summer turned to fall, economists switched from reminding people that the stock market is not the same as the economy to declaring that the stock market had become fully unhinged from reality. Meanwhile, the shift to working, communicat­ing and buying from home enriched the tech giants.

Wealthy consumers, who were less likely to have lost their jobs during the pandemic and who had more disposable income by staying home, were part of a rally that helped Tesla’s stock balloon 525% during the past year.

Amazon’s gains of 86% since the beginning of the pandemic came as consumers shifted in droves to online shopping, worried that running to the store to grab basics endangered them. The demand at the dawn of the pandemic was so great that Amazon, like many retailers, struggled to stock such items as toilet paper and disinfecta­nt. Global retail e-commerce sales grew 27.6% in 2020, even as total worldwide retail sales declined by 3%, according to research firm eMarketer.

As companies shifted to remote work, they relied even more heavily on cloud-computing services, where customers rent data storage and processing capabiliti­es over the Web instead of running their own data centers, from companies such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google, whose stocks soared. Google and Facebook benefited from a faster-than-expected rebound in online advertisin­g, as well as the need for communicat­ion tools including Google Classroom and Facebook’s WhatsApp.

Apple’s market capitaliza­tion crossed the $2 trillion threshold last year, making its chief executive, Tim Cook, a billionair­e.

By August, stocks hit a record high, marking the fastest rebound from a bear market in history, The Post reported.

Tech billionair­es invested comparativ­ely little of that increased wealth back into the public sphere for the pandemic. Bezos donated $150 million, or roughly 0.26% of the profits he accrued during the pandemic, to COVID-related causes, “while also having his workers work in Dickensian conditions,” said Tompkins-Stange, the University of Michigan professor. Musk reportedly gave $5 million, or 0.004% of his newfound gains, to COVID-19 research, in addition to donating ventilator­s built to help patients with sleep apnea.

Amazon added 500,000 jobs in 2020, including 400,000 in the United States, Amazon spokeswoma­n Lisa Levandowsk­i said via email. Those jobs “pay twice the federal minimum wage, and provide employees with benefits like health insurance, 401(k) company matching, and up to 20 weeks of paid parental leave,” she added.

“There is no doubt that big-tech billionair­es and the companies they own have endangered our democracy and control far too much of our economic and political life. The time has come to tax their wealth and break up tech giants and other huge conglomera­tes that have monopolize­d nearly every sector of our economy.” SEN. BERNIE SANDERS, I-VT.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States