Wealth and inequality thread 🧵

The world’s five richest men have more than doubled their fortunes from $405 billion to $869 billion since 2020 —at a rate of $14 million per hour— while nearly five billion people have been made poorer, reveals a new Oxfam report on inequality and global corporate power. If current trends continue, the world will have its first trillionaire within a decade but poverty won’t be eradicated for another 229 years.

https://www.oxfam.org/en/press-releases/wealth-five-richest-men-doubles-2020-five-billion-people-made-poorer-decade-division

Wealth of five richest men doubles since 2020 as five billion people made poorer in "decade of division," says Oxfam | Oxfam International

Oxfam International

A billion dollars is 1000 millions. A thousand of them.

A trillion dollars is 1000 billions or 1000x1000 millions or a MILLION millions.

Really anyone who bothers to come anywhere near any of these numbers has some sort of sociopathy going on.

Wealth, shown to scale

Wealth inequality in the United States is out of control. Here we visualize the issue in a unique way.

Chart showing what proportion of people (at left) own how much of all household wealth.

The top 1% own about 30%.
The next 9% own about 37%
The next 40% own about 30%
The bottom 50% own about 2.5%

Interesting factoid:

If we were to eat all the billionaires in the world we would be able to feed a population of--basically nobody it doesn't matter that's not the point at all.

#EatTheRich #ConsumeFineBillionaires #WhiteWineSauce

Trickle down doesn't work. No kidding.

https://mastodon.social/@jmcrookston/113464645313984642

My older thread about wealth and inequality including Canadian billionaires, how the more companies you own the richer you get, and Taylor Swift

https://mastodon.social/@jmcrookston/111320949039933718

The rich and everybody else’: Financial inequality in Canada keeps growing

https://www.tvo.org/article/the-rich-and-everybody-else-financial-inequality-in-canada-keeps-growing

TVO Today | Current Affairs Journalism, Documentaries and Podcasts

One in three children and one in four adults live in poverty in the United Kingdom.

Those are absolutely flabbergasting numbers.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/nov/18/more-than-one-in-three-uk-children-poverty-deprivation-record-high

More than one in three children in poverty as UK deprivation hits record high

Exclusive: Study finds almost quarter of UK population living in poverty, reaching the highest level this century

The Guardian
Billionaires believe crazy ideas like going to Mars as a PR ploy, or to avoid the guilt from mindlessly chasing numbers on a page?
PR
25%
guilt
12.5%
both!
25%
they know they would be tastier on Mars
37.5%
Poll ended at .

"The science behind winning a Nobel prize? Being a man from a wealthy family"

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/dec/07/the-science-behind-winning-nobel-prize-being-man-from-wealthy-family-torsten-bell

Of course. And the secret to being wealthy? Be born into a rich family. And for the parents before that? Usually luck and connections.

American Dream is really American Mirage

The science behind winning a Nobel prize? Being a man from a wealthy family

A lot of talent is wasted in a world where more than half of laureates come from households in the richest 5%

The Guardian

"Based on data from 2019, the anti-poverty charity has estimated that the 77 million ā€œsuper-richā€ people in the global top 1% of earners – whose average income is $310,000 per year – use 2.1 tonnes of carbon dioxide each in just ten days. In contrast, it takes those in the world’s poorest 50% – 3.9 billion people – nearly three years to pollute that much." "

https://www.climatechangenews.com/2025/01/10/oxfam-super-rich-already-burned-more-fair-share-carbon-2025-oxfam/

How much carbon do the super-rich already burn in 2025?

A report by UK-based NGO Oxfam says the world's super-rich have already used up their fair carbon budget for 2025.

Climate Home News

_ā€˜The rich and everybody else’: Financial inequality in Canada keeps growing_. TVO Today speaks with author John Peters about the billionaire class, deregulation, and why the workforce is becoming more precarious

https://www.tvo.org/article/the-rich-and-everybody-else-financial-inequality-in-canada-keeps-growing

TVO Today | Current Affairs Journalism, Documentaries and Podcasts

'50 years of giving the money to the wealthy people resulted in the poor people getting no money,' is not a terribly surprising result. 🤔

"50 years of tax cuts for the rich failed to trickle down, economics study says"
https://mastodon.social/@jmcrookston/113464645313984642

_CEO pay has skyrocketed 1,322% since 1978. CEOs were paid 351 times as much as a typical worker in 2020_
https://www.epi.org/publication/ceo-pay-in-2020/
CEO pay has skyrocketed 1,322% since 1978: CEOs were paid 351 times as much as a typical worker in 2020

What this report finds: Corporate boards running America’s largest public firms are giving top executives outsize compensation packages that have grown much faster than the stock market and the pay of typical workers, college graduates, and even the top 0.1%. In 2020, a CEO at one of the top 350 firms in the U.S. was paid $24.2 million on average (using a ā€œrealizedā€ measure of CEO pay that counts stock awards when vested and stock options when cashed in rather than when granted). This 18.9% increase from 2019 occurred because of rapid growth in vested stock awards and exercised stock options. Using a different ā€œgrantedā€ measure of CEO pay, average top CEO compensation was $13.9 million in 2020, slightly below its level in 2019. In 2020, the ratio of CEO-to-typical-worker compensation was 351-to-1 under the realized measure of CEO pay; that is up from 307-to-1 in 2019 and a big increase from 21-to-1 in 1965 and 61-to-1 in 1989. CEOs are even making a lot more than other very high earners (wage earners in the top 0.1%)—more than six times as much. From 1978 to 2020, CEO pay based on realized compensation grew by 1,322%, far outstripping S&P stock market growth (817%) and top 0.1% earnings growth (which was 341% between 1978 and 2019, the latest data available). In contrast, compensation of the typical worker grew by just 18.0% from 1978 to 2020.

Economic Policy Institute

"The Middle Ages, which lasted roughly from the 5th to the late 15th century, was a time when a person's punishment for crime was based mostly on where they sat on the social structure."

"I thought this was the 21st century though"
- me, confused, checking calendar

https://www.historyskills.com/classroom/year-8/medieval-crime-and-punishment/

Medieval justice: Crime and punishment in the Middle Ages

The Middle Ages, which lasted roughly from the 5th to the late 15th century, was a time when how a person was punished for crime was based mostly on where they sat on the social structure. In ways that seem unfair to us today, the length and severity of punishment could be much less if you were rich and powerful. However, the goal of the justice system was still to punish offenders, keep order, and even scare others from breaking the law in the future.

History Skills