Super-rich bagged 82 per cent of wealth created last year
Super-rich bagged 82 per cent of wealth created last year - poorest half of world got nothing, says Oxfam
Eighty two per cent of the wealth generated last year went to the richest one per cent of the global population, while the 3.7 billion people who make up the poorest half got nothing, according to a new Oxfam report released today. The report is being launched as political and business elites gather for the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Earlier today Oxfam New Zealand reported that the richest 1 per cent of Kiwis bagged a staggering 28 per cent of all wealth created last year while the poorest 30 per cent of the population got just 1 per cent.
‘Reward Work, Not Wealth’ reveals how the global economy enables the super-rich to accumulate vast wealth at the expense of hundreds of millions of people who are struggling to survive on poverty pay.
•
2017 saw an unprecedented increase in the number of
billionaires, at a rate of one every two days. Billionaire
wealth has risen by an average of 13 per cent a year since
2010 – six times faster than the wages of ordinary
workers, which have risen by a yearly average of just 2 per
cent.
• It takes just four days for a CEO from
one of the top five global fashion brands to earn what a
Bangladeshi garment worker will earn in her entire lifetime.
In the US, it takes slightly over one working day for a CEO
to earn what an ordinary worker makes in a year.
•
It would cost US$2.2 billion a year to increase the wages of
all 2.5 million Vietnamese garment workers to a living wage.
This is about a third of the amount paid out to wealthy
shareholders by the top 5 companies in the garment sector
last year.
Oxfam’s report outlines the key factors
driving up rewards for shareholders and multi-national
corporate bosses at the expense of workers’ pay and
conditions, particularly in developing countries. These
include the erosion of workers’ rights; the excessive
influence of multi-national big business over government
policy-making; and the relentless corporate drive to
minimise costs in order to maximise returns to
shareholders.
Oxfam has also highlighted the role of tax havens in helping the extremely wealthy become even richer, with multinational tax avoidance from corporations costing poor countries at least US$100 billion each year. Furthermore, many of these companies are growing their profits at the expense of their workers – paying unfair wages, and forcing them to work in gruelling conditions.
Rachael Le Mesurier, Executive Director of Oxfam New Zealand said: “The billionaire boom is not a sign of a thriving economy but a symptom of a failing economic system. The people who make our clothes, assemble our phones, and grow our food are being exploited to ensure a steady supply of cheap goods, and swell the profits of multi-national corporations and billionaire investors.’
Women workers often find themselves
off at the bottom of the heap. Across the world, women
consistently earn less than men and are concentrated in the
lowest paid and least secure forms of work. By comparison, 9
out of 10 billionaires are men.
“Oxfam has spoken to
women across the globe whose lives are blighted by
inequality. Women in Vietnamese garment factories who work
far from home for poverty pay and don’t get to see their
children for months at a time. Women working in the US
poultry industry who are forced to wear nappies because they
are denied toilet breaks. Women working in hotels in Canada
and the Dominican Republic who stay silent about sexual
harassment for fear of losing their jobs,” said Le
Mesurier.
Oxfam is calling for governments globally to
ensure our economies work for everyone and not just the
fortunate few:
• Limit returns to fair
levels for shareholders and top executives, and ensure all
workers receive a minimum ‘living’ wage that would
enable them to have a decent quality of life. For example,
in Nigeria, the legal minimum wage would need to be tripled
to ensure decent living standards.
• Eliminate
the gender pay gap and protect the rights of women workers.
At current rates of change it will take 217 years to close
the gap in pay and employment opportunities globally between
women and men.
• Ensure the extremely wealthy
pay their fair share of tax through higher taxes and a
crackdown on tax avoidance, and increase spending on public
services such as healthcare and education. Oxfam estimates a
global tax of 1.5 per cent on billionaires’ wealth could
pay for every child in the world to go to school.
•
In New Zealand, demonstrate global leadership and work with
political leaders to call for international tax reforms,
including strengthening tax transparency for multi-nationals
which is an essential step in fighting global tax
avoidance.
Results of a new global survey commissioned by
Oxfam demonstrates a groundswell of support for action on
inequality. Of the 120,000 people surveyed in 10 countries,
nearly two-thirds of all respondents think the gap between
the rich and the poor needs to be urgently
addressed.
“It’s hard to find a political or business
leader who doesn’t say they are worried about inequality.
However there are not that many who are doing something
about it. Many political leaders are actively making things
worse by slashing taxes and scrapping labour rights,” said
Le Mesurier.
“People across the globe are ready for
change. They want to see workers paid a living wage; they
want multi-national corporations and the superrich to pay
more tax; they want women workers to enjoy the same rights
as men; they want a limit on the power and the wealth which
sits in the hands of so few. They want action from their
governments.”
Notes to
editors
‘Reward Work, Not Wealth’ and a
methodology document that outlines how Oxfam arrived at the
key statistics in the report, is available for download
here.
Broadcast quality footage and photographs available featuring Lan, who works in a garment factory in Vietnam, supplying many global fashion brands. Long hours and poverty pay mean Lan has not been able to get home to see her son for 9 months. https://wordsandpictures.oxfam.org.uk/?c=34775&k=ae837a41d2
New data from Credit Suisse reveals that 42 people now own the same wealth as the poorest half of humanity. This figure cannot be compared to figures from previous years - including the 2016/17 statistic that eight men owned the same wealth as half the world - because it is based on an updated and expanded data set published by Credit Suisse in November 2017. When Oxfam recalculated last year’s figures using the latest data we found that 61 people owned the same wealth as half the world in 2016 – and not eight.
Oxfam’s calculations are based on global wealth distribution data provided by the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Data book 2017. The wealth of billionaires was calculated using Forbes' billionaires list last published in March 2017.
RIWI and YouGov
conducted the online survey for Oxfam in ten countries:
India, Nigeria, United States, United Kingdom, Mexico, South
Africa, Spain, Morocco, Netherlands and Denmark. For details
on the methodology and the full results see
http://bit.ly/2DRoFAB