SMH, Gareth Hutchens, January 21, 2014
Illustration: Cathy Wilcox |
That is 85
people compared with 3.5 billion.
A new report from Oxfam has been published in time for the World Economic Forum in
Davos this week.
It shows
the world's ultra-wealthy have not only recovered from the global financial
crisis, they have positively blossomed.
The report
shows the wealth of the 1 per cent richest people in the world is worth about
$US110 trillion, 65 times the total wealth of the bottom half of the world's
population.
It also
shows the world's richest 85 people control about $US1.7 trillion in wealth,
equivalent to the bottom half of the world's population.
And far
from hindering the wealthy, the political response to the global financial
crisis - including the actions of central banks and the austerity measures
introduced by national governments - has made the rich fabulously richer.
In the US,
the wealthiest 1 per cent of the population grabbed 95 per cent of
post-financial crisis growth between 2009 and 2012, while the bottom 90 per
cent became poorer.
But an
Oxfam survey of six countries - the United States, UK, Spain, Brazil, India and
South Africa - has found that the majority of people believe laws and
regulations are skewed in favour of the rich, so people are noticing.
It has
called on the world's powerful meeting in Davos to try to stem the tide of
rising inequality.
It says
seven out of 10 people live in countries where economic inequality has
increased in 30 years.
''Given the
scale of rising wealth concentrations, opportunity capture and unequal
political representation are a serious and worrying trend,'' the report says.
''This
massive concentration of economic resources in the hands of fewer people
presents a significant threat to inclusive political and economic systems.''
Economists
say the rise in global inequality is not surprising.
The US
Federal Reserve's multibillion-dollar bond-buying program was singled out as a
major driver of the increase in wealth inequality.
"The
distribution of wealth has been widening, both before and after the financial
crisis,'' Bank of America chief economist Saul Eslake said.
''And
although I don't criticise the policies on these grounds, I think it's fairly
apparent that the policies that are being pursued, particularly by central
banks, in an attempt to revive major advanced economies after the financial
crisis, have probably contributed to widening the distribution of wealth.''
Frank
Stilwell, Emeritus Professor at Sydney University, said he was not surprised there
was inequality of that magnitude, but he wondered if Davos would be the forum
to address it.
''It should
be a matter of public concern, within and between nations, because this
concentration among the ultra-wealthy I think is pretty well documented within
countries,'' Professor Stilwell said.
''The
bigger question is if the World Economic Forum and its member participants can
do anything about these trends is another matter.''
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