Extreme,
obese, bloated, obscene, engorged; call it what you will, the problem is
getting larger by the year and if nothing is done it will ultimately crush the
rest of us.
If
you wonder why 99% of us have had to go on an economic “starvation diet” the
following report will make your stomach growl!
I’ve
copied the complete report because I believe it is the most informative reports on
this topic written so far. I would challenge skeptics to present a coherent rebuttal
if they can. That of course excludes accusing Oxfam of being an Obama front for
socialists and communists.
OXFAM MEDIA BRIEFING
18 January 2013 Ref: 02/2012
OXFAM
MEDIA BRN8 January 2013 Ref: 02/2012
The cost of inequality:
how wealth and income extremes hurt us all
The world must urgently set goals to tackle extreme inequality and
extreme wealth
It is now widely
accepted that rapidly growing extreme wealth and inequality are harmful to
Human progress and
that something needs to be done. Already this year, the World Economic
Forum’s Global Risk
Report rated inequality as one of the top global risks of 20131. The
IMF and
The Economist2 agree.
Around the world, the Occupy protests demonstrated the increasing public
anger and feeling that
inequality has gone too far3.
In the last decade, the focus has been exclusively on one half of
the inequality equation – ending extreme poverty. Inequality and the extreme
wealth that contributes to it were seen as either not relevant, or a prerequisite
for the growth that would also help the poorest, as the wealth created trickled
down to the benefit of everyone.
There has been great
progress in the fight against extreme poverty. Hundreds of millions of
people have seen their
lives improve dramatically – an historically unprecedented achievement
of which the world
should be proud4. But as we look to the next decade, and new development
goals we need to
define progress, we must demonstrate that we are also tackling inequality- and
that means looking at
not just the poorest but the richest5.
Oxfam believes that
reducing inequality is a key part of fighting poverty and securing a
sustainable future for all. In a
world of finite resources, we cannot end poverty unless we reduce inequality
rapidly.
That is why we are
calling for a new global goal to end extreme wealth by 2025, and reverse the
rapid increase in
inequality seen in the majority of countries in the last twenty years, taking
inequality back to
1990 levels67.
Extreme wealth & inequality are reaching levels never before
seen and are getting Worse
Over the last thirty
years inequality has grown dramatically in many countries. In the US the
share of national
income going to the top 1% has doubled since 1980 from 10 to 20%. For the
top 0.01% it has
quadrupled8 to levels never seen before. At a global level, the top 1% (60
million people)9, and
particularly the even more select few in the top 0.01% (600,000 individuals -
there are around 1200
billionaires in the world), the last thirty years has been an incredible
feeding frenzy10.
This is not confined to the US, or indeed to rich countries.
In the UK inequality
is rapidly returning to levels not seen since the time of Charles Dickens11. In
China the top 10% now take home nearly 60% of the income. Chinese inequality
levels are now similar to those in South Africa,12 which
are now the most unequal country on earth and significantly more unequal than
at the end of apartheid13. Even in many of the poorest countries, inequality has rapidly
grown14.
Globally the incomes
of the top 1% have increased 60% in twenty years.15 The
growth in income for the 0.01% has been
even greater16. Following the financial crisis, the process has accelerated,
with the top 1% further 17 increasing their share of income18. The
luxury goods market has registered double digit growth every year since the
crisis hit19. Whether it is a sports car or a super-yacht, caviar or
champagne, there has never been a bigger demand for the most expensive
luxuries.
The IMF has said that
inequality is dangerous and divisive and could lead to civil unrest20.
Polling
shows the public is
increasingly concerned about growing inequality in many countries, and by
people across the
political spectrum2122.
Extreme wealth and inequality is economically inefficient
A growing chorus of
voices is pointing to the fact that whilst a certain level of inequality may
benefit growth by
rewarding risk takers and innovation, the levels of inequality now being seen
are in fact
economically damaging and inefficient23.
They limit the overall amount of growth, and at the same time mean
that growth fails to benefit the majority. Consolidation of so much wealth and capital in so few
hands is inefficient because it depresses demand, a point made famous by
Henry Ford24 and
more recently billionaire Nick Hanauer in his much-discussed TED talk25.
There quite simply is
a limit to how many luxury yachts a person could want or own. Wages in
many countries have
barely risen in real terms for many years, with the majority of the gains
being to capital
instead26. If this money were instead more evenly spread across the
population
then it would give
more people more spending power, which in turn would drive growth and drive
down inequality27.
The top 100
billionaires added $240 billion to their wealth in 2012- enough to end world poverty
four times over.28. As a result growth in more equal countries is much more effective
at reducing poverty. Oxfam research has shown that because it is so unequal, in
South Africa even with sustained economic growth a million more people will be
pushed into poverty by 2020 unless action is taken29.
Extreme Wealth and Inequality is Politically Corrosive
If, in the words of
the old adage ‘money equals power’ then more unequal societies represent a
threat to meaningful
democracy. This power can be exercised legally, with hundreds of millions
spent each year in
many countries on lobbying politicians, or illegitimately with money used to
corrupt the political
process and purchase democratic decision making. Joseph Stiglitz30 and
others31 have
pointed out the way in which financial liberalisation led to huge power for the
financial industry,
which in turn has led to further liberalisation.
In the UK the
governing Conservative party receives over half its donations from the
financial services industry32. Capture of politics by
elites is also very prevalent in developing countries, leading to policies that
benefit the richest few and not the poor majority, even in democracies. 33
Extreme Wealth and Inequality is Socially Divisive
Extreme wealth and
inequality undermines societies. It leads to far less social mobility. If you
are
born poor in a very
unequal society you are much more likely to end your life in poverty. As
Richard Wilkinson, co-
author of the Spirit Level34, has said, the American dream is more real in
Sweden than it ever
has been in the United States35. Social mobility has fallen
rapidly in many
countries as
inequality has grown36.
If rich elites use
their money to buy services, whether it is private schooling or private
healthcare, they have less interest in public services or paying the taxes to
support them. Those from elites are much more likely to end up in political
office or other positions of power, further entrenching inequality. Their
children are likely to be as rich, if not richer, than their parents, with
inter-generational inequality increasing37.
Inequality has been linked to many different social ills, including violence,
mental health, crime and obesity38. Crucially inequality has
been shown to be not only bad for the poor in unequal societies but also the
rich. Richer people are happier and healthier if they live in more equal
societies39.
Extreme Wealth and Inequality is Environmentally Destructive
As the world is
rapidly entering a new and unprecedented age of scarcity and volatility,
extreme
inequality is
increasingly environmentally unaffordable and destructive. The World Bank has
shown that countries
with more equal distribution of land are more equitable and more efficient,
and grow faster40.
Those in the 1% have been estimated to use as much as 10,000 times more
carbon than the
average US citizen41. Increasing scarcity of resources like land and water mean
that assets being
monopolised by the few cannot continue if we are to have a sustainable future.
Poverty reduction in
the face of extreme wealth will become harder as resources become more
scarce. More equal
societies are better able to cope with disasters and extreme weather events.
Studies show that more
equal countries are also better able to reduce carbon emissions42.
Extreme Wealth and Inequality is un ethical
Gandhi famously said “Earth
provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's
greed.” From an
ethical point of view, it is extremely difficult to justify excessive wealth
and
inequality. In fact,
most philosophers and all of the major religions caution against the pursuit of
excessive wealth at
all cost and prescribe sharing of income with less fortunate members of the
community.
For instance, the
Koran bans usury and says that the rich should give away a portion
of their money. The
decision of Bill Gates and Warren Buffet to give away their fortunes or to call
for greater taxation
of excess wealth is an example to the rest of the world’s billionaires.
Extreme wealth and inequality is not inevitable
After the Great
Depression in the US in the 1930s, huge steps were taken to tackle inequality
and vested interests.
President Roosevelt said that the ‘political equality we once had won was
meaningless in the
face of economic inequality’43. These steps were echoed in
Europe after
World War Two, leading
to three decades of increasing prosperity and reduced inequality.
Similarly the growth
of the Asian tiger economies like Korea was achieved whilst reducing
inequality and meant
the benefits were widely spread across their societies44.
More recently,
countries like Brazil45,
once a poster child for extreme inequality, have managed to buck the
global trend and
prosper whilst reducing inequality.
The policies required
to reduce inequality are also well known. Decent work for decent wages
has had a huge impact.
The rise in the power of capital over labour has been identified by Paul
Krugman46 among
many others as a key cause of the recent crisis47 and
one that means that
assets are not being
used productively, in turn reducing demand.
.
Free public services
are crucial to levelling the playing field. In countries like Sweden, knowing
that if you get sick
or that you will receive good treatment regardless of your income, is one of
the
greatest achievements
and the greatest equalisers of the modern world. Knowing that if you lose
your job, or fall on
hard times, there is a safety net to help you and your family, is also key to
tackling inequality.
Similarly, access to good quality education for all is a huge weapon against
inequality.
Finally, regulation
and taxation play a critical role in reining in extreme wealth and inequality.
Limits to bonuses, or
to how much people can earn as a multiple of the earnings of the lowest
paid, limits to
interest rates, limits to capital accumulation are all only recently-abandoned
policy
instruments that can
be revived. Progressive taxation that redistributes wealth from the rich to the
poor is essential, but
currently the opposite is the case – taxation is increasingly regressive and
the poor pay higher
effective tax rates than the rich, a point recently highlighted by Warren
Buffet
among others, who has
called for greater taxes on the rich48.
Cracking down on tax avoidance
and tax evasion goes
hand in hand with more progressive taxation. Closing tax havens and
ending the global race
to the bottom on taxation, for example with a globally agreed minimum
rate of corporation
tax would make a huge difference It is estimated that up to a quarter of all
global wealth – as
much as $32 trillion - is held offshore49. If
these assets were taxed according
to capital gains taxes
in different countries, they could yield at least $189 billion in additional
tax
revenues50.
End extreme wealth and inequality
Whatever the
combination of policies pursued, the first step is for the world to recognise
this as
the goal. There are
many steps that can be taken to reverse inequality. The benefits are huge,
for the poorest – but
also for the richest. We cannot afford to have a world of extreme wealth and
extreme inequality. We
cannot afford to have a world where inequality continues to grow in the
majority of countries.
In a world of increasingly scarce resources, reducing inequality is more
important than ever.
It needs to be reduced and quickly.
An end to extreme
wealth by 2025. Reversing increasing extreme inequality and aim to return
inequality to 1990
levels.
1 http://www.weforum.org/issues/global-risks
2 http://www.economist.com/node/21564413
and http://blog-imfdirect.imf.org/2011/04/08/inequality-and-growth/
3 http://occupywallst.org/
4 Paradoxically
this means that whilst inequality in many countries has increased, overall
global inequality has reducedhttp://
www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p/?p=12888
5 Inequality
is traditionally measured using the Gini co-efficient. However, this fails to
capture in many instances the extraordinary rise in the
incomes of the top 1%
or even 0.01%, so a combination of both Gini and the amounts accruing to
different sections of society is needed to
fully understand the
scope and scale of inequality. See for example Palma, J http://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2006/wp35_2006.pdf
for a
non-Gini view.
6 1990
could be the base year for a global goal of inequality reduction, but
individual countries may also have peak equality years that differ that
they would choose to
get back to if 1990 is not sufficient in terms of reducing inequality. There is
a parallel here to be drawn with global
agreement to reduce
carbon emissions.
7 Cornia
and Addison (2003), for example, found that between the 1960s and 1990s
inequality increased in about two-thirds of the 73 countries
they studied
(accounting for about 80 per cent of the world’s population). They also found
that in those where inequality increased, this was
normally equivalent to
at least 5 points in the Gini scale. http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/dae/repec/cam/pdf/cwpe1111.pdf
8 http://www.economist.com/node/21564414
9 Milanovic,
Branko, 2012. "Global income inequality by the numbers : in history and
now --an overview--," Policy Research Working Paper Series
6259, The World Bank.
10 See
also Crystia, F The Plutocrats
11 http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/the-perfect-storm-economic-stagnation-the-rising-cost-of-living-public-spending-228591
12 http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21568423-new-survey-illuminates-extent-chinese-income-inequality-each-not
13 http://www.oxfam.org/en/policy/left-behind-by-g20
14 http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/11/africe-economic-growth-jeopardised-rising-inequality
15 http://www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p/?p=12888
16 Inequality
is usually measured using incomes, and the data for the super rich is
notoriously hard to get, as very few fill in surveys. Focusing on
incomes also hugely
underestimates inequality- if inequality of assets is also taken into account
levels are even higher as asset growth has
been far greater than
incomes.
17 http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/jun/14/britons-stuck-in-perfect-storm-inequality
18 http://www.smh.com.au/executive-style/management/the-megarich-just-keep-getting-richer-20130102-2c5m8.html
19 http://www.bain.com/about/press/press-releases/bain-projects-global-luxury-goods-market-will-grow-ten-percent-in-2012.aspx
20 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/globalbusiness/8296987/IMF-raises-spectre-of-civil-wars-as-global-inequalities-worsen.html
21 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/28/taxing-the-rich-poll_n_2203400.html,
22 http://www.pewglobal.org/2012/12/20/slideshow-pew-researchs-global-year-in-review/pg_12-18-12_yearslides_02_capitalism/
and
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-19953634
23 See
for example the IMF- Berg and Ostry 2011 http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/sdn/2011/sdn1108.pdf
24 http://corporate.ford.com/news-center/press-releases-detail/677-5-dollar-a-day
25 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQi6xJ3-7l4
26 http://www.clevelandfed.org/research/commentary/2012/2012-13.cfm
27 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/17/business/economy/income-inequality-may-take-toll-on-growth.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
and
http://blog-imfdirect.imf.org/2011/04/08/inequality-and-growth/
28 http://www.globalresearch.ca/billionaires-gain-as-living-standards-fall/5318471
and http://topics.bloomberg.com/bloomberg-billionaires-index/
the top 100
billionaires added $241 billion to their income in 2012. Jeff Sachs has
estimated that it would cost $175 billion a year for 2 years
to end extreme poverty.
29 http://www.oxfam.org/sites/www.oxfam.org/files/bp157-left-behind-by-the-g20-190112-en.pdf
30 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/05/books/review/the-price-of-inequality-by-joseph-e-stiglitz.html?pagewanted=all-
31 See also Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich
Richer--and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class by Jacob Hacker and Paul
Pierson
32 http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/sep/30/city-conservatives-donations
33 http://tinyurl.com/aq9k7nk
Democratisation and the Dynamics of Income Distribution in Low and
Middle-income Countries, 1985 -- 1995
34 Wilkinson,
R and Pickett K, The Spirit Level
35 http://www.ted.com/talks/richard_wilkinson.html
36 .
http://www.economist.com/node/21564417
37 World
Bank Word Development Report 2006,page 47
38 World
Bank Word Development Report 2006, Equity and Development and Wilkinson, R and
Pickett, K, The Spirit Level
39 Wilkinson,
R and Pickett, K, The Spirit Level
40 World
Bank Word Development Report 2006, Equity and Development
41 http://www.tomshardware.com/news/bill-gates-microsoft,5242.html
42 http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2013039
and http://oep.oxfordjournals.org/content/52/4/651.abstract
43 Great Speeches (Dover Thrift Editions) [Paperback] Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Author), John Grafton (Editor)
44 ‘the
experience of today’s Asian tigers is in striking contrast to that of an
earlier pack. In Japan, Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan growth
rates soared in the
1960s and 1970s and prosperity increased rapidly but income gaps shrank. Japan’s
Gini coefficient fell from 0.45 in the
early 1960s to 0.34
in 1982; Taiwan’s from 0.5 in 1961 to below 0.3 by the mid-1970s. That
experience launched the idea of an “Asian
growth model”, one
that combined prosperity with equity.’ http://www.economist.com/node/21564408
45 http://www.economist.com/node/21564411
.
46 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/10/opinion/krugman-robots-and-robber-barons.html?_r=1&
and
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2012/int061412a.htm
47 http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2010/wp10268.pdf
48 http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/aug/15/warren-buffett-higher-taxes-super-rich
49 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18944097
50 http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/upload/pdf/The_Price_of_Offshore_Revisited_Presser_120722.pdf
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