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Friday, 15 December 2017
World's richest 0.1% have boosted their wealth by as much as poorest half
Inequality report also shows UK’s 50,000 richest people have seen their share of the country’s wealth double since 1984
The Monaco Yacht Show. The richest 1% of the global population captured 27% of the world’s wealth growth between 1980 and 2016.
Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images
The richest 0.1% of the world’s population have increased their
combined wealth by as much as the poorest 50% – or 3.8 billion people –
since 1980, according to a report detailing the widening gap between the
very rich and poor.
The World Inequality Report,
published on Thursday by French economist Thomas Piketty, warned that
inequality had ballooned to “extreme levels” in some countries and said
the problem would only get worse unless governments took coordinated
action to increase taxes and prevent tax avoidance.
The report, which drew on the work of more than 100 researchers
around the world, found that the richest 1% of the global population
“captured” 27% of the world’s wealth growth between 1980 and 2016. And
the richest of the rich increased their wealth by even more. The top
0.1% gained 13% of the world’s wealth, and the top 0.001% – about 76,000
people – collected 4% of all the new wealth created since 1980.
“The top 0.1% income group (about 7 million people) captured as much
of the world’s growth since 1980 as the bottom half of the adult
population,” the report said. “Conversely, income growth has been
sluggish or even nil for the population between the global bottom 50%
and top 1%.”
The economists said wealth inequality had become “extreme” in Russia
and the US. The US’s richest 1% accounted for 39% of the nation’s wealth
in 2014 [the latest year available], up from 22% in 1980. The
researchers noted that “most of that increase in inequality was due to
the rise of the top 0.1% wealth owners”.
The world’s richest person is Amazon’s founder and chief executive, Jeff Bezos,
who has a $98.8bn (£73.9bn) fortune, according to the Bloomberg
billionaires index. Bezos, the biggest shareholder in Amazon, has seen
his wealth increase by $33bn over the past year alone. Collectively, the
world’s five richest people – Bezos, Bill Gates, Warren Buffett,
Amancio Ortega, the owner of Zara, and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg – hold
$425bn of assets. That is equivalent to one-sixth of the UK’s GDP.
In the UK, the richest 1% control 22% of the country’s wealth, up
from 15% in 1984. The very richest in the UK have seen a huge increase
in their wealth. The top 0.1% – around 50,000 people – have seen their
share of the nation’s wealth double from 4.5% in 1984 to 9% in 2013.
“The increase in the concentration of wealth in the last four decades
is very much a phenomenon confined to the hands of the top 0.5% (the
richest 250,000 Britons), and in particular the top 0.1% (the richest
50,000),” the report said.
The richest people in the UK are the Hinduja family, who control a
conglomerate of businesses including cars and banks, and are worth
$15.4bn.
The economists, led by Piketty who shot to global fame after the publication of his book Capital in the Twenty-First Century,
said there was a “huge gap” in wealth between the richest people in the
UK and everyone else in the country. They said the bottom 90% of people
in the UK had an average wealth of £68,000, compared with £321,000
among the richest 10% and the top 0.5%, who were worth £3.7m on average.
While inequality was high in north America and Europe, the
researchers warned that the problem was even more acute in Africa,
Brazil and the Middle East, where they said “inequality has remained
relatively stable at extremely high levels in recent decades”.
“The
top 10% receives about 55% of total income in Brazil and sub-Saharan
Africa, and in the Middle East, the top 10% income share is typically
over 60%,” the report said. “These three regions never went through the
postwar egalitarian regime and have always been at the world’s
high-inequality frontier.”
The report warns that unless there is globally coordinated political
action, the wealth gap will continue to grow. “The global top 1% income
share could increase from nearly 20% today to more than 24% by 2050,”
the report said. “In which case the global bottom 50% share could fall
from 10% to less than 9%.”
However, the economists said increasing inequality was “not
inevitable” if countries acted to bring in progressive income tax. “It
not only reduces post-tax inequality, it shrinks pre-tax inequality by
discouraging top earners from capturing higher shares of growth via
aggressive bargaining for higher pay.”
The authors said taxation alone was not enough to tackle the problem
as the wealthy were best placed to avoid and evade tax, as shown by the
recent Paradise Papers investigation. The report said a tenth of the world’s wealth was held in tax havens.
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