Two magazine covers
stood out in poignant contrast on newsstands last week. Forbes
magazine released its 29th annual listing of the world’s billionaires.
Time Magazine’s cover story wondered “How to End Poverty.”
It was a good year
for the global billionaires’ club. Their ranks grew to 691, up 17
percent from the previous year. Collectively, the wealth of the world’s
billionaires reached $2.2 trillion, up more than 57 percent over the
last two years.
Poverty is growing as
well. Time reports that nearly half of the world’s 6 billion residents
are poor. Over one billion of them subsist on less than $1 a day. In the
United States, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, the number of
impoverished Americans rose 3.7 percent in 2003. The number of children
living in poverty rose 6.6 percent.
Forbes seeks to
explain the billionaires’ success by noting that a majority of those on
the list are “self-made.” Forbes’ website features an interactive quiz
that asks, “Do you have what it takes to become a billionaire?” and
proceeds to explore things like marital status and hobbies. The idea is
that many billionaires made it on their own.
But to suggest that
membership in the growing billionaires’ club requires only a combination
of hard work and character traits ignores some dramatic shifts in global
economic rules that explain the cavernous divide that has developed
between the very rich and the very poor.
Tax rates have fallen
on upper income citizens and corporations worldwide. Fifty years ago in
the United States, the highest marginal income tax rate was 91 percent;
today it is 34 percent. As recently as 1979, taxes on capital gains from
the sale of stock, real estate and businesses were 35 percent; today
they are 15 percent. Corporate taxes as a percentage of the U.S. economy
have shrunk from 4.1 percent of Gross Domestic Product in 1965 to just
1.5 percent in 2002. While corporate taxes have declined throughout the
world, they have plummeted in the United States, leaving only Iceland
among industrialized countries with a lower corporate tax burden.
Several of the
wealthiest billionaires capitalized on public assets and made their
fortunes by buying them. This was the case with Mexican Carlos Slim Helu,
the world’s fourth richest man, who used inherited wealth to buy a
substantial share of Mexico’s privatized national telephone company.
U.S. billionaires Bill Gates, Paul Allen and Steve Ballmer of Microsoft,
and Larry Ellison of Oracle would not be in Forbes’ top 20 billionaires
had the U.S. government not invested tens of billions of public dollars
developing computers and the Internet.
Some billionaires’
fortunes rest upon paying their employees poverty-level wages. Such is
the case for the Walton family (numbers 10 through 14 on the Forbes
list.) Wal-Mart is the largest private employer in the world. Many of
its U.S. workers are so poorly paid that they must rely on food stamps
and other forms of public assistance to get by. Such forms of government
aid represent an indirect government subsidy to corporations whose
business model does not include paying employees enough to live on.
Worldwide, billions are gained by outsourcing service, production and
manufacturing functions to workers who labor in sweatshop conditions in
countries like China.
The role of
government policy in determining who has wealth and who does not
continues to expand. During the recent debate on the bankruptcy bill,
federal lawmakers refused to close the “asset protection trust” loophole
increasingly used by millionaires and billionaires to shelter mansions
and other assets from creditors in bankruptcy. Those same lawmakers
weakened protections that protect the family homes of ordinary people
from creditors during bankruptcy.
Forbes is wrong;
none of the billionaires did it alone. The chasm between rich and poor
is not a divide between who has intelligence and drive and who does not.
Rather it results from a society whose rules allow some to amass wealth
greater than could be enjoyed in a thousand lifetimes, while they deny
others enough money to scrape through just one lifetime.
Scott Klinger is the
co-director of the Responsible Wealth project at United for a Fair
Economy
www.faireconomy.org and co-author of “Executive Excess 2004:
Campaign Contributions, Outsourcing, Unexpensed Stock Options and Rising
CEO Pay.”
© 2005 Minuteman Media
###