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Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Editorial

Place of majority population amidst the few billionaires
Even under the setting of modern society, the gap between the poor and the very rich continues to haunt the majority population who are at the employ of the rich. At this setting, the rich feed the many poor through employment while the latter stretch all their energies to make both ends meet. The imbalance: only a few billionaires hold society’s resources.

This editorial finds it interesting to reprint a news article of  Agence France-Presse published at The Manila Times (January 21, 2020) for reflection of the readers amidst a poor-rich situation. The news item is entitled “Billionaires richer than 60% of world’s population” … we quote and unquote: 
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DAVOS, Switzerland: The world’s billionaires have doubled in the past decade and are richer than 60 percent of the global population, the charity Oxfam said Monday (January 20).

It said poor women and girls were at the bottom of the scale, putting in “12.5 billion hours of unpaid care work each and every day,” estimated to be worth at least $10.8 trillion a year.

“Our broken economies are lining the pockets of billionaires and big business at the expense of ordinary men and women. No wonder people are starting to question whether billionaires should even exist,” Oxfam’s India head Amitabh Behar said.

“The gap between rich and poor can’t be resolved without deliberate inequality-busting policies,” Behar said ahead of the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, where he will represent Oxfam.

Oxfam’s annual report on global inequality is traditionally released just before the forum opens on Tuesday (January 21) in the Swiss Alpine resort.

It had some astonishing statistics.

“The 22 richest men in the world have more wealth than all the women in Africa,” it said.

If the world’s richest 1 percent paid just 0.5 percent extra tax on their wealth for 10 years, it would equal the investment needed to create 117 million new jobs in elderly and child care, education and health, Oxfam said.

Oxfam’s figures are based on data from Forbes magazine and Swiss bank Credit Suisse, but they are disputed by some economists.

The numbers show that 2,153 billionaires now have more wealth than the 4.6 billion poorest people on the planet.

Women and girls were burdened in particular because they were most often caregivers that keep “the wheels of our economies, businesses and societies moving,” Behar said.

They “often have little time to get an education, earn a decent living or have a say in how our societies are run,” and “are therefore trapped at the bottom of the economy,” he added.

“Across the globe, 42 percent of women cannot get jobs because they are responsible for all the care giving, compared to just 6 percent of men,” Oxfam figures showed.

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