Oxfam has released a report revealing
how the world's most wealthy nations can save the world from poverty.
The report detailed how those at the upper rung of the financial
ladder can salvage the heinous worm called poverty.
The $240 billion net income of the
world's 100 richest billionaires would have ended poverty four times
over, according to the London-based group's report. The group has
called on world leaders to commit to reducing inequality to the
levels it was at in 1990, and to curb income extremes on both sides
of the spectrum.
The release of the report was timed to
coincide with the holding of the World Economic Forum in Davos. The
group says that the world's richest one percent have seen their
income increase by 60 percent in the last 20 years, with the latest
world financial crisis only serving to hasten, rather than hinder,
the process.
"We sometimes talk about the
'have-nots' and the 'haves' - well, we're talking about the
'have-lots'. We're an anti-poverty agency. We focus on poverty, we
work with the poorest people around the world. You don't normally
hear us discuss wealth. But it's gotten so out of control between
rich and poor that one of the obstacles to solving extreme poverty is
now extreme wealth," Ben Phillips, a campaign director at Oxfam,
told Al Jazeera.
"We can no longer pretend that the
creation of wealth for a few will inevitably benefit the many – too
often the reverse is true," said Jeremy Hobbs, an executive
director at Oxfam. "Concentration of resources in the hands of the
top one per cent depresses economic activity and makes life harder
for everyone else – particularly those at the bottom of the
economic ladder.
"In a world where even basic
resources such as land and water are increasingly scarce, we cannot
afford to concentrate assets in the hands of a few and leave the many
to struggle over what’s left." Hobbs said that "a global
new deal" is required, encompassing a wide array of issues, from
tax havens to employment laws, in order to address income inequality.
Closing tax havens, the group said,
could yield an additional $189 billion in additional tax revenues.
According to Oxfam's figures, as much as $32 trillion is currently
stored in tax havens.
In a statement, Oxfam warned that
"extreme wealth and income is not only unethical it is also
economically inefficient, politically corrosive, socially divisive
and environmentally destructive."
The financially buoyant countries are
not ready to be committed to the betterment of humanity. Their main
interest has always been and will always be the continual entrenchment of
financial blissfulness for the microscopic few at the expense of the
wretched masses.
Africa is at the centre of the suffering yet she supplies the world the needed resources. Africa gives life to others but she is killing herself.
Africa is at the centre of the suffering yet she supplies the world the needed resources. Africa gives life to others but she is killing herself.
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