The National - News

PRINCIPLES OVERRIDE PRIVILEGE AS WEALTH IMBALANCE IS DENOUNCED

In our latest bi-weekly round-up, the Salesforce chief and a US presidenti­al hopeful campaign for a fairer system

- The National

Marc Benioff

American tech entreprene­ur Marc Benioff, who has a net worth of $6.69 billion (Dh24.57bn), acknowledg­ed that capitalism has been good to him in a New York Times opinion article last week. Salesforce, the cloud computing company he co-founded 20 years ago, has generated billions in profits and made him a “very wealthy person”.

There are positives of such success, including Mr Benioff’s personal philanthro­py. But “capitalism as it has been practised in recent decades – with its obsession on maximising profits for shareholde­rs – has also led to horrifying inequality”, he wrote in the article titled “We Need a New Capitalism”.

Globally, the 26 richest people in the world now have as much wealth as the poorest 3.8 billion people, according to the article. In the US, income inequality has reached its highest level in at least 50 years, with the top 0.1 per cent owning about 20 per cent of the wealth.

“To my fellow business leaders and billionair­es, I say that we can no longer wash our hands of our responsibi­lity for what people do with our products,” Mr Benioff wrote. “Yes, profits are important, but so is society. And if our quest for greater profits leaves our world worse off than before, all we will have taught our children is the power of greed.”

He advocated for a “more fair, equal and sustainabl­e capitalism” in which companies truly give back and have a positive impact on society. He also called for higher taxes on the wealthiest, including himself, to “generate the trillions of dollars that we desperatel­y need to improve education and health care and flight climate change”.

Tom Steyer

US presidenti­al hopeful Tom Steyer is the latest billionair­e to respond to fellow candidate Bernie Sanders’s tweet last month that “billionair­es should not exist”.

At the Democratic debate last week, the moderator asked Mr Sanders if he intended to tax billionair­es out of existence. He responded: “If you’re asking me do I think we should demand that the wealthiest top one 10th of 1 per cent start paying their fair share of taxes … yes, that’s exactly what I believe.”

When given the floor, former hedge fund entreprene­ur Mr Steyer agreed with Mr Sanders, saying: “There have been 40 years where corporatio­ns have bought this government and those 40 years have meant a 40-year attack on the rights of working people and specifical­ly on organised labour. The results are as shameful as Senator Sanders said”.

He pledged to “undo every Republican tax cut for rich people and major corporatio­ns”. Some of the country’s wealthiest people, including Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, have called for their own taxes to be raised. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has gone even further, declaring that “no one deserves” the amount of wealth that he and other billionair­es have accumulate­d.

Adam Neumann

Forbes removed WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann from its billionair­e list earlier this month after lowering his wealth estimate from $4.1bn to $600 million.

The demotion follows the removal of Mr Neumann as WeWork CEO last month, a botched IPO and hundreds of planned job cuts. The company has been in negotiatio­ns with its largest shareholde­r SoftBank over a new $1bn investment to enable the shared office space company to go through a major restructur­ing.

Mr Neumann first appeared on the Forbes billionair­es list in 2016, at age 36, with an estimated net worth of $1.5bn. Private investors had just valued WeWork at more than $10bn. Following multiple funding rounds, led by SoftBank, it was valued at $47bn in January this year.

Forbes estimates We Company, as it is now called, is worth at most $2.8bn. That valuation is based on a multiple of the company’s revenue consistent with publicly traded competitor IWG. We Company had a net loss of $1.4bn in the first half of this year.

Mr Neumann, who is now chairman, still owns an estimated 18 per cent stake in the nine-year-old company.

Bill Gates

Bill Gates committed $700m to battle diseases that kill millions of people a year, saying experiment­al technologi­es such as a matchstick-sized implant to prevent HIV could become new weapons in the global effort.

The implant, under developmen­t by Merck and inserted just under the skin of a patient’s arm, is among potential breakthrou­ghs Mr Gates highlighte­d at an internatio­nal conference in France this month. Others include a tuberculos­is vaccine GlaxoSmith­Kline is developing.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will provide the money to the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculos­is and Malaria over the next three years, bringing its total contributi­on since 2002 to almost $3bn. The Microsoft co-founder pointed to significan­t strides in fighting the three diseases, saying the fund has cut deaths by 40 per cent in areas where it invests. But Mr Gates has also warned that wealthier nations risk losing sight of the need to keep funding those efforts.

“More and more, countries seem to be stepping back from the world and saying they’ll cut things like foreign aid,” Mr Gates said at the conference in Lyon. “If there’s a narrative about how the globe is turning, it is that it’s turning inward.”

Mr Gates, who heads the world’s biggest private charity with his wife, Melinda, also cited a triple drug for TB treatment that shows significan­t promise against even the most resistant forms of the disease.

While Mr Gates’s focus was on progress, he said a child still dies every two minutes from malaria, almost 1,000 adolescent girls and young women are infected with HIV every day, and nearly 40 per cent of people who become ill with TB each year go unreported and untreated.

Jay Y Lee

Samsung’s de facto leader, Jay Y Lee, plans to give up his board seat after his directorsh­ip expires later this month as he prepares for another trial over alleged bribery, a source told Bloomberg.

The billionair­e heir will not seek to extend his three-year term on the board of the tech behemoth when it ends next Saturday, but will remain at the head of the world’s largest chip and smartphone maker, the source said. Mr Lee will instead continue to run Samsung with the title of vice-chairman.

The 51-year-old is putting some distance between himself and South Korea’s largest conglomera­te before a retrial over bribery charges that could land him back in jail. He faces additional allegation­s in a case that inflamed popular anger over the large companies known as “chaebols” that control the country’s economy.

When Mr Lee joined the board in 2016, it was deemed a symbolic move to step out from under the shadow of his ailing father and consolidat­e his power over Samsung. Yet months later, Mr Lee got caught up in a nationwide scandal.

He spent about a year in prison battling accusation­s that he offered horses and funds to a confidante of then-president Ms Park in return for support of a 2015 merger that cemented his control over the Samsung group.

Since his release in 2018, Mr Lee has been busily recultivat­ing an image as the face of successful business. The only son of chairman Lee Kun-hee has been grappling with a laundry list of tasks including steering Samsung through a severe industry downturn. The company’s operating income fell more than 50 per cent in the third quarter.

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 ??  ?? While acknowledg­ing that capitalism has been kind to him, Marc Benioff, left, was also unable to resist biting the hand that fed him. Jay Y Lee, top right, and Bill Gates, below
While acknowledg­ing that capitalism has been kind to him, Marc Benioff, left, was also unable to resist biting the hand that fed him. Jay Y Lee, top right, and Bill Gates, below
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