Billionaires' wealth soared in 2024, anti-poverty group says as the 
		elites prepare for another Davos
						
		 
		
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		 [January 20, 2025]  By 
		JAMEY KEATEN 
						
		DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — Billionaires' wealth grew three times faster 
		in 2024 than the year before, a top anti-poverty group reported on 
		Monday as some of the world's political and financial elite prepared for 
		an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland. 
		 
		Oxfam International, in its latest assessment of global inequality timed 
		to the opening of the World Economic Forum meeting, also predicts at 
		least five trillionaires will crop up over the next decade. A year ago, 
		the group forecast that only one trillionaire would appear during that 
		time. 
		 
		OxFam's research adds weight to a warning by outgoing President Joe 
		Biden last week of a “dangerous concentration of power in the hands of 
		very few ultra-wealthy people.” The group's sharp-edged report, titled 
		“Takers Not Makers,” also says the number of people in poverty has 
		barely budged since 1990. 
		 
		The World Economic Forum expects to host some 3,000 attendees, including 
		business executives, academics, government officials, and civic group 
		leaders at its annual meeting in the Alpine village of Davos. 
		 
		What's the worry about? ... The ‘new aristocracy’ 
		 
		President-elect Donald Trump, who visited Davos twice during his first 
		term and was set to take the oath of office on Monday, is expected to 
		take part in the forum's event by video on Thursday. He has long 
		championed wealth accumulation — including his own — and counts 
		multibillionaire Elon Musk as a top adviser. 
						
		  
						
		“What you’re seeing at the moment is a billionaire president taking 
		oaths today, backed by the richest man. So this is pretty much the jewel 
		in the crown of the global oligarchies,” Amitabh Behar, executive 
		director of Oxfam International, said in an interview, referring to 
		Trump and Musk. 
		 
		“It’s not about one specific individual. It’s the economic system that 
		we have created where the billionaires are now pretty much being able to 
		shape economic policies, social policies, which eventually gives them 
		more and more profit,” he added. 
		 
		Like Biden’s call for making billionaires “begin to pay their fair 
		share” through the U.S. tax code, Oxfam — a global advocacy group — 
		called on governments to tax the richest to reduce inequality and 
		extreme wealth, and to “dismantle the new aristocracy.” 
		 
		The group called for steps like the break-up of monopolies, capping CEO 
		pay, and regulation of corporations to ensure they pay “living wages” to 
		workers. 
		 
		How are the poorest faring? 
		 
		Many investors racked up strong gains in 2024, with strong performances 
		for top tech companies and stock-market indexes like the S&P 500, as 
		well as the price of gold and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. 
		 
		
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            The mountains above the village of Davos, with the The Congress 
			Center, center, where the annual meeting of World Economic Forum 
			will take place, are covered with snow, in Davos, Switzerland, 
			Sunday, Jan. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber) 
            
			
			
			  Oxfam said billionaire wealth grew 
			by $2 trillion last year, or roughly $5.7 billion a day, three-times 
			faster than in 2023. The number of billionaires rose by 204 to 
			2,769, and the 10 richest men saw their wealth rise nearly $100 
			million a day on average, it said. 
			 
			Citing World Bank data, the group pointed to lingering poverty, 
			saying the number of people living on less than $6.85 per day has 
			“barely changed” since 1990. Oxfam used Forbes’ Real-Time 
			Billionaire List” as of end-November for data on the ultra-rich. 
			 
			By contrast, at least four new billionaires were “minted” every week 
			in 2024, and three-fifths of billionaire wealth comes from 
			inheritance, monopoly power or “crony connections,” it said. 
			 
			On average, Oxfam said, low- and middle-income countries are 
			spending nearly half their national budgets on debt repayments. It 
			also noted that life expectancy in Africa is just under 64 years of 
			age, compared to over 79 years in Europe. 
			 
			Will it be business as usual at Davos again this year? 
			 
			Despite the growing gap between the über rich and the poor, the 
			annual Davos confab, which formally begins on Tuesday, will likely 
			focus this year again on making money and doing deals, with 
			strongman leaders on the rise in some Western countries and 
			progressive causes like diversity and climate change waning in the 
			business world. 
			 
			The continued rise of artificial intelligence as a tool for business 
			to reap greater efficiencies will also again be a central theme in 
			Davos, despite worries in many sectors that AI could upend many 
			white-collar jobs and displace workers in an array of industries. 
			 
			Trump's return for a second term will likely be on many lips in 
			Davos, as will lingering conflicts, including wars in Ukraine and 
			Sudan, along with hopes for a continuation of a cease-fire that 
			began on Sunday between Hamas and Israel, pausing their devastating 
			15-month war in Gaza. 
			 
			Forum organizers last week issued a survey conducted among 900 
			experts for “Global Risks Report,” which found that conflicts 
			between countries was the top concern, followed by extreme weather, 
			economic confrontation, misinformation and disinformation, and 
			“societal polarization” — a nod to the gap between rich and poor. 
			 
			As in past years, protesters calling for more economic equality, 
			taxing the rich and pressing other demands took to the streets. Some 
			blocked roads to Davos, snarling traffic in places and delaying 
			trips for some attendees to the event, which runs through Friday. 
			
			
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