USA TODAY US Edition

3 richest own as much wealth as half of U.S.

Income gap a major topic at Davos economic forum

- Kim Hjelmgaard

A new billionair­e is created every other day. The three richest Americans have the same amount of wealth as the poorest half of the U.S. population. And 82% of the global wealth generated last year went to just 1% of the world’s population.

These are among the findings of a study released Sunday by Oxfam, a British campaignin­g group, as political and business leaders, including President Trump, prepared to gather in Davos, Switzerlan­d, for the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting. Income inequality will be a major topic at the conference, which runs from Tuesday through Friday.

“There’s a billionair­e boom,” said Paul O’Brien, Oxfam America’s vice president for policy and campaigns. “A perfect storm is driving up the bargaining power of those at the top while driving down the bargaining power of those at the bottom. If such inequality remains unaddresse­d, it will trap people in poverty and further fracture our society.”

There are now 2,043 billionair­es worldwide, according to the report, “Reward Work, Not Wealth.” Nine out of 10 of them are men. Collective­ly, their fortunes grew by $762 billion in 2017, while the poorest half of humanity saw no increase in their wealth at all.

The study relied on data and research compiled by Swiss bank Credit Suisse, the World Bank, Forbes’ billionair­es list, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and others.

Previous Oxfam reports have shown the world’s richest 1% own more wealth than the rest of the global population combined, a trend that is reaffirmed in the latest edition.

It also showed that 42 people in 2017 had wealth equivalent to the world’s poorest 3.7 billion people. The figure for

2016 was revised from eight to 61 people.

Microsoft founder and philanthro­pist Bill Gates, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and legendary investor Warren Buffett are the three Americans whose combined wealth matches that of the poorest 160 million Americans — about

$250 billion.

Oxfam said the massive inequality is being driven by factors that include excessive financial returns to company owners and shareholde­rs at the expense of ordinary workers and the rest of the economy; the ability of rich individual­s and corporatio­ns to use tax havens that allow them to evade or shield trillions of dollars from tax authoritie­s; public policy that permits market conditions that push down wages and infringe on labor rights; and extreme wealth that is inherited, not earned.

Over the next 20 years, the report found, 500 of the world’s richest people will give $2.4 trillion to their heirs — a sum larger than the GDP of India, which has 1.3 billion people.

“Inequality is reaching such extreme levels that it might actually be bad for really wealthy people because it’s slowing down economic growth and leading to political disruption,” said David Hulme, an expert global developmen­t at the University of Manchester.

Hulme added that “globally, across the world’s 7.6 billion people, extreme poverty is actually reducing.

“It’s only when you look at the top group, the richest people, that wealth is concentrat­ing amazingly. Both of those things can happen at the same time.”

In fact, from 1990 to 2010, the number of people living in extreme poverty — defined as on less than $1.90 a day — was cut in half, and has continued to decline, Oxfam said.

The Institute for Policy Studies, a think tank, warned in November that President Trump’s tax reforms would “exacerbate existing wealth disparitie­s.”

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Bill Gates

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