The wealthiest 400 people in the world saw their combined
net worth grow by $92 billion last year, hitting $4.1 trillion. The bonanza for
the super-rich was underwritten by governments and central banks around the
world, which fueled surging stock markets and record corporate profits by
pumping hundreds of billions into the financial markets.
The combined net worth of these 400 individuals is greater
than the gross domestic product of Germany, the fourth largest economy in the
world. The average net worth of each of the billionaires grew by $240 million,
to $10.25 billion.
Over the past year the American Nasdaq index has shot up by
14.1 percent. The Japanese Nikkei is up by 7.1 percent. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average closed above 18,000 for the first time on December 26, after
hitting a record 17,000 in July 2014 and 16,000 in November 2013. The Dow is up
by 155 percent over its level in March 2009, when it was below 6,000. Two of
the three billionaires who made the most in 2014 reside in China, which is
experiencing a stock market bubble, with the country’s FTSE Xinhua 200 index up
by 49.49 percent over the past year.
US corporate profits have likewise hit record highs,
reaching $1.8 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2014, up from $671 billion in
the fourth quarter of 2008.
Investor Warren Buffett, the world’s second richest man,
according to the Bloomberg list, saw his wealth grow to $74.5 billion, up by
$13.7 billion, or more than 22 percent, in the past year. Buffett’s wealth has
more than doubled since 2009. “Dozens of operating businesses the 84-year-old
chairman bought over the past five decades churned out record profit” over the
past year. Buffett’s business model has been to buy traditional industries such
as railroads and food producers, then ruthlessly cut costs, making billions in
the process. Buffett’s businesses have profited handsomely from the ongoing
fall in labor costs, which have been dropping year after year since 2008 as a
result of falling wages and cuts in benefits for workers.
Jack Ma, chairman of Alibaba Group, saw his wealth shoot up
by $25.1 billion this year, to $28.7 billion, following the September initial
public offering of shares in the Chinese Internet trading company he heads. The
wealth of Wang Jianlin, chairman and founder of the Chinese conglomerate Dalian
Wanda, nearly doubled over the past year, hitting $25.3 billion, after his
company held an initial public offering for its commercial properties division
last year. Of the six billionaires whose wealth more than doubled, five live in
China.
Bill Gates, the world’s richest man, saw his wealth grow by
$9.1 billion, to $87.6 billion. Oracle CEO Larry Ellison’s net worth grew by
$5.7 billion, to $49.4 billion. The wealth of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
increased $10.6 billion to $35.3 billion. Zuckerberg’s wealth has grown nearly
18-fold since 2009, when it stood at $2 billion. Billionaire investors George
Soros and Carl Icahn featured prominently, with $26.1 and $23.6 billion,
respectively.
Today’s oligarchs make their fortunes on the basis of social
plunder and parasitism. The obscene enrichment of the world’s billionaires and
multi-millionaires is dependent on the growth of unemployment and poverty
around the world.
Last month, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) published a report noting: “Today, the richest 10 percent of
the population in the OECD area earn 9.5 times the income of the poorest 10
percent; in the 1980s this ratio stood at 7:1 and has been rising continuously
ever since.” The OECD reported that the gap between the top 10 percent and the
bottom ten percent had reached “around 10 to 1 in Italy, Japan, Korea, Portugal
and the United Kingdom, between 13 and 16 to 1 in Greece, Israel, Turkey and
the United States, and between 27 and 30 to 1 in Mexico and Chile.”
According to a report issued by the International Labor
Organization last year, the number of people worldwide without work has hit 200
million for the first time ever. The figure marked a 5 million increase in one
year, surpassing 2009’s record high of 198 million.
12 percent of the world’s population, or 860 million people,
lives in poverty. Some 805 million people were chronically undernourished between
2012 and 2014, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization.
The latest Bloomberg report on the super-rich is one more
demonstration of the failure of capitalism and the necessity for the working
class to overthrow it and replace it with socialism. Organise for a world of production for use not profit. A world of common ownership and democratic control without the state, leaders, nations, war or money.
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