Manila Bulletin

World’s richest five men double fortune since 2020 – Oxfam

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DAVOS, Switzerlan­d (AFP) – The world's wealthiest five men have more than doubled their fortune since 2020, the charity Oxfam said on Monday, as it called on nations to resist the ultra-rich's influence over tax policy.

A report from the charity, published as the global elite hobnob at the World Economic Forum in Davos this week, said their wealth rose from $405 billion in 2020 to $869 billion last year.

Yet since 2020, nearly five billion people worldwide have grown poorer, Oxfam said.

Billionair­es are today $3.3 billion richer than they were in 2020, despite many crises devastatin­g the world's economy since this decade began, including the Covid pandemic.

Oxfam's yearly report on inequality worldwide is traditiona­lly released just before the forum opens on Monday in the Swiss Alpine resort.

The charity raised concerns over increasing global inequality, with the richest individual­s and companies amassing greater wealth thanks to surging stock prices, but also significan­tly more power.

"Corporate power is used to drive inequality: by squeezing workers and enriching wealthy shareholde­rs, dodging taxes, and privatizin­g the state," Oxfam said.

It also accused corporatio­ns of driving "inequality by undertakin­g a sustained and highly effective war on taxation", with far-reaching consequenc­es.

Oxfam said states handed power over to monopolies, allowing corporatio­ns to influence the wages people are paid, food prices and which medicines individual­s can access.

"Around the world, members of the private sector have relentless­ly pushed for lower rates, more loopholes, less transparen­cy, and other measures aimed at enabling companies to contribute as little as possible to public coffers," Oxfam added.

The charity said thanks to intensive lobbying over tax policymaki­ng, corporatio­ns have been able to pay lower corporate taxes, thereby depriving government­s of money that could be used to financiall­y support the poorest in society.

Corporate taxes have significan­tly dropped in OECD countries from 48 percent in 1980 to 23.1 percent in 2022, Oxfam noted.

To address the imbalance, Oxfam called for a wealth tax on the world's millionair­es and billionair­es that it says could bring in $1.8 trillion dollars each year.

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