Business

Oxfam urges ‘billionaire-busting’ policies in Davos

Aid group highlights tax inequity between rich and poor in World Economic Forum

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 16 Jan 2023 11:30AM

Oxfam urges ‘billionaire-busting’ policies in Davos
Oxfam has presented a report saying billionaires had doubled their wealth over the last 10 years, with the wealthiest 1% gaining 74 times more than the bottom 50%. – AFP pic, January 16, 2023

DAVOS – The number of billionaires should be reduced by half by 2030 through higher taxes and other policies to make the world more equal, Oxfam said today as global elites meet in Davos.

The aid group made its plea as the Swiss Alpine village hosts political leaders, CEOs and celebrities for the week-long World Economic Forum starting today.

In a report titled “Survival of the Richest”, Oxfam said billionaires had doubled their wealth over the last 10 years, with the wealthiest 1% gaining 74 times more than the bottom 50%.

The very wealthy have grown richer amid the cost-of-living crisis sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic and soaring food and energy prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the report said.

Since 2020, billionaire wealth has surged by US$2.7 billion (RM11.66 billion) a day even as inflation outpaced the wages of at least 1.7 billion workers worldwide, Oxfam said.

Food and energy companies, it noted, had more than doubled their profits last year.

Oxfam called for taxes at rates that progressively redistribute wealth and reduce extreme inequality.

For starters, it said, “the world should aim to halve the wealth and number of billionaires between now and 2030, both by increasing taxes on the top 1% and by adopting other billionaire-busting policies”.

Such steps would bring billionaire wealth and numbers back to levels last seen in 2012.

“The eventual aim should be to go further, and to abolish billionaires altogether, as part of a fairer, more rational distribution of the world’s wealth,” it said.

Oxfam said higher taxes on dividends as well as “one-off solidarity” wealth and windfall taxes should be introduced “to stop crisis profiteering”.

It also called for a permanent tax increase on the richest 1%, with a minimum 60% tax on their income from labour and capital.

Citing a report by the US investigative news group ProPublica, Oxfam said many of the world’s richest people paid hardly any taxes, with Tesla boss Elon Musk facing a “true tax rate” of just 3.2% between 2014-2018 and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos paying less than 1%.

In stark comparison, a market trader in Uganda who works with Oxfam pays 40% of her profits in tax, the charity said. – AFP, January 16, 2023

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