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As Davos crowd gathers, governments urged to rein in 'billionaire class'

Published 01/14/2024, 07:08 PM
Updated 01/15/2024, 11:32 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Jeff Bezos watches as model presents a creation for Dolce & Gabbana Fall/Winter 2024/25 men's collection in Milan, Italy January 13, 2024. REUTERS/Alessandro Garofalo/File Photo
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By Mark John

(Reuters) - The combined fortunes of the world's five richest men have more than doubled to $869 billion since 2020 while five billion people have been made poorer, anti-poverty group Oxfam said.

An Oxfam report, which comes as business elites gather this week for the annual World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, found that a billionaire is now either running, or is the main shareholder of, 7 out of 10 of the world's biggest companies.

Oxfam called on Monday for governments to rein in corporate power by breaking up monopolies; instituting taxes on excess profit and wealth; and promoting alternatives to shareholder control such as forms of employee ownership.

It estimated that 148 top corporations made $1.8 trillion in profits, 52 percent up on 3-year average, allowing hefty pay-outs to shareholders even as millions of workers faced a cost of living crisis as inflation led to wage cuts in real terms.

"This inequality is no accident; the billionaire class is ensuring corporations deliver more wealth to them at the expense of everyone else," said Oxfam International interim Executive Director Amitabh Behar.

The Davos events were launched to champion "stakeholder capitalism", which the WEF says defines a corporation as being not just about maximising profits but fulfilling "human and societal aspirations as part of the broader social system".

Oxfam said its report, based on data sources ranging from the International Labour Organization and World Bank to the Forbes annual rich list, showed such aspirations were far from being fulfilled.

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"What we know for sure is that today's extreme system of shareholder capitalism, which puts ever-increasing returns to rich shareholders above all other objectives, is driving inequality," said Max Lawson, its Head of Inequality Policy.

The inflation-adjusted surge in wealth of the top five billionaires was driven by strong gains in the assets of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk, LVMH chief Bernard Arnault, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN)'s Jeff Bezos, Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) co-founder Larry Ellison and investor Warren Buffett.

Meanwhile nearly 800 million workers saw their wages over the past two years fail to keep up with inflation, resulting on average in the equivalent of 25 days of lost annual income per worker, according to Oxfam's analysis.

Of the world's 1,600 largest corporations, just 0.4% of them have publicly committed to paying workers a living wage and to supporting a living wage in their value chains, the study found.

(Writing and reporting by Mark John; Editing by Alexander Smith)

Latest comments

government power and out of control spending need yo be reigned in! oh wait... they would never consider that.
Unregulated AI and corporate stock buybacks cannot be legal at the same time. Do you want a revolution?
Reign in AI. All it is going to do is exacerbate income inequality. Maybe it will break the system and make us all realize these culture wars have always been rich against poor and nothing else, but the transition period will be catastrophic either way.
At the end all stimulus money ended on their hand. Most people that got the free stimulus money do not know how to make money with money. They just wasted it and money ended on those that know how to make money with money. You can not blame them for that. Blame the big goverment
Blame the people in charge of central banks that see Wingstop trading at 114 P/E and want to lower interest rates. They’ve lost their minds.
most of the really wealthy never worked a day of there lives the hire other people lto make money for them.. for the most the're dumb and uncaring as rocks. when problems arise in their petty little lives, they blame others and use their money to buy there way out of trouble they created....sound familiar that stimulus money.. most of it was spent on staying alive and having some kind of life.during the pandemic .
Tom is in a bubble. Workers laid off during Trump's shutdown used stimulus money to survive.
Easy, just quit printing money. After that stop government borrowing, no longer giving them safe, tax payer guaranteed investments. Unfortunately taxing them just gives money to corrupt politicians and inefficient bureaucrats.
your government working hard for you
Like this matters... governments work for them
IT'S A CONSPIRACY!!!
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