The world’s wealthy are getting richer

Rising economic division is destabilizing nations and eroding accountability

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Editorials

December 2, 2025 - 10:36 AM

Today’s billionaires’ pocketbooks are getting fatter almost in lockstep with global food insecurity, creating an increasingly unequal world. It’s a policy of choice, produced by specific economic, political and legal decisions. Elyse Chia/Unsplash

When Swiss tycoons handed Donald Trump a gold bar and a Rolex watch — gifts that were followed by a cut in US tariffs — it was no diplomatic nicety. 

It was a reminder of how concentrated wealth seems to buy access and bend policy. 

It may, alarmingly, become the norm if the global “inequality emergency” continues. That’s the message of the most recent work by the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz. 

The economist sees the yawning gap between rich and poor as a human-made crisis which is destroying politics, society and the planet. He’s not wrong.

The problem is no longer confined to a few fragile states. It is a global harm, with 90% of the world’s population living under the World Bank’s definition of “high income inequality.” 

The U.S. sits just below that threshold and is the most unequal country in the G7, followed by the UK. 

Prof. Stiglitz’s insight is that the current system’s defenders can no longer explain its mounting anomalies. 

Hence he wants a new framework to replace it. His blueprint for change is contained within the G20’s first-ever inequality report, endorsed by key European, African and middle-income nations.

It warns that the richest 1% captured 41% of all new wealth since 2000, while the bottom half gained just 1%. 

On average, someone in the global top 1% became $1.3 million richer; a person in the poorest half gained $585. 

Meanwhile, 2.3 billion people are now moderately or severely food insecure — 335 million more than in 2019. 

Wealth concentration far outstrips income concentration, with billionaires’ assets worth one-sixth of global GDP. 

Shockingly, billionaire wealth is rising almost in lockstep with global food insecurity.

The report argues that extreme inequality is a policy choice — produced by specific economic, political and legal decisions rather than by “globalization” or technology. 

Financial deregulation, weakening labor protections and privatization all aid rising inequality, as does cutting corporate and top income tax rates. 

The report stresses that the most dangerous consequences are political, with highly unequal countries seven times more likely to experience democratic backsliding or authoritarian drift. 

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