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OPINION

Oxfam Report: No, More for the Super-rich Does Not Mean Less for the Poor

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The mainstream media are all reporting on the latest Oxfam report. The five richest men in the world have more than doubled their wealth since 2020, says Oxfam.  

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Oxfam said the world’s five wealthiest men were worth 405 billion U.S. dollars in 2020. This figure has now risen to 869 billion U.S. dollars. Meanwhile, the world’s billionaires are 3.3 trillion billion U.S. dollars richer over the same period. The almost five billion “poorest” people lost 20 billion U.S. dollars in wealth during this period, so much for Oxfam.

Global poverty is in decline ­– the number of billionaires is rising.

Of course, Oxfam chooses the data to fit Oxfam’s thesis. 2020 was deliberately chosen as the year of comparison because of a massive coronavirus crash on the global stock markets. This makes the super-rich’s subsequent gains appear all the higher in comparison. And since the number of people living in extreme poverty worldwide fell last year (which does not fit the thesis), Oxfam suddenly uses an entirely different reference figure, namely the almost five billion “poorest.” But this is not the crucial point.

Oxfam suggests a correlation between rising wealth and growing poverty. This makes sense to the larger number of people who subscribe to the so-called zero-sum heuristic. The communist poet Bertolt Brecht concisely expressed this erroneous zero-sum heuristic in his poem “Alfabet”: 

 “Said the poor man with a twitch:

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Were I not poor, you wouldn’t be rich.” 

But such zero-sum beliefs are wrong. According to World Bank figures, 28 percent of the global population was living in extreme poverty in 2000, compared to 8.5 percent today! In the same period, the number of billionaires has increased from 470 to 2,640, and only a tiny proportion of this increase is due to inflation.

In countries where poverty has fallen the most, billionaires have grown the most. In 1981, 88 percent of the Chinese population was living in extreme poverty; today, it is less than one percent. At the same time, the number of billionaires in China has risen more than anywhere else in the world, from 0 to 562. Only the United States is home to more billionaires than China (and a few years ago, China even overtook the U.S. for a while). The reason for the increase in the number of billionaires and the decrease in poverty is the same: economic growth resulted from increased economic freedom.

Anyone pining for countries without billionaires doesn’t need to wait until they are all expropriated. There are countries without billionaires in parts of Africa, Cuba, or North Korea. Countries with large numbers of billionaires include Switzerland and Singapore, which have a high proportion of billionaires. But even in highly-lauded Sweden, the proportion of billionaires (in relation to the population) is 60 percent(!) higher than in the U.S. Although Sweden has high income taxes, it has abolished inheritance, gift, and wealth taxes. According to the Index of Economic Freedom, Sweden is now the world's 10th most economically free (i.e., capitalist) country, while the United States is only in 25th place.

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Year after year, Oxfam delivers “studies” that always lead to demands for the rich to be taxed more. The studies are methodologically highly questionable. And yet, the media fall into the same trap every year, as I have shown in detail in my book The Rich in Public Opinion.

You are left with the impression that the media don’t even want to look at the actual data; for them, the study is credible because it fits in with their anti-rich resentment, whereby the rich are the scapegoats for all the world’s ills.

Rainer Zitelmann is the author of the book In Defense of Capitalism.

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