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Wealth of three richest Australians has doubled since 2020 as cost-of-living pressures for many continue to bite

Gina Rinehart, Andrew Forrest and Harry Triguboff (Image from knoansw.com)

Oxfam Australia Media Release 

Analysis finds that in the same period, five billion people around the world have been made poorer.

The wealth of the three richest Australians, Gina Rinehart, Andrew Forrest and Harry Triguboff, has more than doubled since 2020 at a staggering rate of $1.5 million per hour, new Oxfam analysis reveals, as the human rights organisation steps up its calls for inequality-busting tax reform starting with scrapping the stage three tax cuts.

Data-crunching also found that the total wealth of Australian billionaires increased by 70.5% or $120 billion in that same period. Meanwhile, many Australians have struggled with the rising cost of food, energy and housing, and five billion people around the world have been made life-threateningly poorer. 

The stark figures are being released today alongside a new Oxfam report on inequality and global corporate power, ‘Inequality Inc’, and as business elites gather in the Swiss resort town of Davos for the World Economic Forum. The report found that if current trends continue, the world will have its first trillionaire within a decade, while poverty won’t be eradicated for another 229 years.

Oxfam Australia Chief Executive Lyn Morgain said the amassing of unimaginable wealth is driving alarming and growing inequality in our society.

“Across the globe, we have begun a decade of division, with billions of people shouldering the perilous economic shock of the pandemic, inflation and war, while billionaires’ fortunes boom.

“At the same time as billionaires are hording more wealth, rocketing cost-of-living pressures mean that everyday Australians are being forced to cut back on food for their families and heating and cooling for their homes, just to keep their heads above water.

“We cannot accept a society that promotes the gross accumulation of wealth alongside widespread global poverty. One of the best mechanisms we have to address this is progressive taxation.

The shame of our woeful global response to catastrophic disasters, displacement, famine and the climate crisis cannot be attributed to a scarcity of resources, it is distribution – and that’s the problem all governments, including the Australian government, need to tackle urgently,” said Ms Morgain.

Oxfam analysis also found:

According to Oxfam, only governments have the power to rein in runaway corporate power and inequality – shaping our economic system to be fairer and free from billionaire control.

Oxfam is calling on the Australian Government to rapidly and radically reduce the gap between the super-rich and the rest of society by fixing the broken tax system. This should include:

 

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