The Guardian (USA)

Wealth of US billionair­es rises by nearly a third during pandemic

- Rupert Neate

The already vast fortunes of America’s 643 billionair­es have soared by an average of 29% since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has at the same time laid waste to tens of millions of jobs around the world.

The richest of the superrich have benefited by $845bn , according to a report by a US progressiv­e thinktank, the Institute for Policy Studies.

The report calculated that 643 billionair­es in the US had racked up $845bn (£642bn) in collective wealth gains since 18 March, when lockdowns began across the US and much of the rest of the world. The collective wealth of the billionair­e class increased from $2.95tn to $3.8tn. That works out to gains of $141bn a month, or $4.7bn a day.

Over the same period, more than 197,000 Americans have died from coronaviru­s and more than 50m Americans have lost their jobs.

Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, who was already the world’s richest person, has benefited most from the pandemic and subsequent global lockdowns. His personal fortune, as estimated by Forbes magazine, has risen by $73.2bn since the start of the crisis to a record $186.2bn. That 65% increase results mostly from the soaring value of Amazon shares as more people turn to the delivery service. In just one day in July, Bezos saw his fortune increase by more than £10bn.

Elon Musk, founder and chief executive of electric car company Tesla, has also benefited from the pandemic. His estimated fortune has risen by 274%, to $92bn, while Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg has seen his wealth increase by 84% or $45.9bn to $100.6bn.

Bill Gates, who has pledged to give at least half of his fortune to charity and has already pledged a “few billion dollars” to the fight against coronaviru­s, has seen his estimated fortune grow by 19% to $116bn.

The vast gains have prompted calls for a windfall tax on super-rich tech titans to help pay for the economic recovery from the pandemic.

Bernie Sanders and Ilhan Omar, both Democratic senators, have intro

duced legislatio­n dubbed the “Make Billionair­es Pay Act”for a one-off 60% tax on the wealth gains of billionair­es between 18 March and the end of the year to help working Americans cover healthcare costs.

Under Sanders’ proposal, Bezos would pay a one-time wealth tax of $42.8bn, and Musk would pay $27.5bn.

Robert Reich, who served as US labour secretary under President Clinton, said “American capitalism is off the rails” and a “wealth tax” was urgently needed to help redress the yawning inequality gap.

“Jeff Bezos could give every Amazon employee $105,000 and still be as rich as he was before the pandemic. If that doesn’t convince you we need a wealth tax, I’m not sure what will.”

“The billionair­e economy has been turbocharg­ed by policymake­rs, who are now stalling on relief for the real economy,” said Chuck Collins, director of the Institute for Policy Studies’ Program on Inequality and co-author of the Billionair­e

Bonanza 2020 report. “The difference is stark between profits for billionair­es and the widespread economic misery in our nation. Clearly, the priorities of elected officials in Washington, DC are completely upside down.”

 ?? Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/ Reuters ?? A report by a US thinktank found that the superrich have benefited from the pandemic by $845bn (£653bn)
Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/ Reuters A report by a US thinktank found that the superrich have benefited from the pandemic by $845bn (£653bn)

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