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»1 Prozent der Weltbevölkerung besitzt mehr Vermögen als der Rest der Welt«

Bericht von Oxfam Deutschland, 18.1.2016

The gap between rich and poor is reaching new extremes. Credit Suisse recently revealed that the richest 1% have now accumulated more wealth than the rest of the world put together. This occurred a year earlier than Oxfam’s much publicized prediction ahead of last year’s World Economic Forum. Meanwhile, the wealth owned by the bottom half of humanity has fallen by a trillion dollars in the past five years.

This is just the latest evidence that today we live in a world with levels of inequality we may not have seen for over a century.

Growing economic inequality is bad for us all  – it undermines growth and social cohesion. Yet the consequences for the world’s poorest people are particularly severe. Apologists for the status quo claim that concern about inequality is driven by ‘politics of envy’. They often cite the reduction in the number of people living in  extreme poverty as proof that inequality is not a major problem. But this is to miss the point. As an organization that exists to tackle poverty, Oxfam is unequivocal in  welcoming the fantastic progress that has helped to halve the number of people  living below the extreme poverty line between 1990 and 2010. Yet had inequality within countries not grown during that period, an extra 200 million people would have escaped poverty. That could have risen to 700 million had poor people benefited more than the rich from economic growth.

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