What if…. we abolished billionaires?

What if…. we abolished billionaires?

4 minutes, 52 seconds Read

Calls to abolish billionaires, or at least curb their growth, have gained traction across many capitals in the West, where extreme wealth has risen to unprecedented levels.

Elon Musk’s pay award of a potential $1 trillion in November will make the Tesla owner not just the richest person in the world, which he already is. If Musk gets the full pay package, he will become the richest person in history.

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Musk would soar ahead of the world’s other billionaires – a record 3,028 of them, according to Forbes magazine, estimated to be sitting on $16.1 trillion of global wealth.

The difference between the world’s rich and poor hasn’t been so stark since the peak of Western imperialism in the early 20th century.

Currently, about 831 million people live at or below the level of extreme poverty across the globe. According to the World Bank, that’s $3 per day when adjusted for currency and cost of living.

In fact, if every billionaire were left with only a billion dollars to their name, the rest of their seized wealth would be enough to cover the amount UN experts believe is needed to end world extreme poverty for the next 196 years.

According to some analysts and economists, the wealth owned by billionaires can skew the world’s politics, media, and even the way we think, to reflect the interests of the super-rich.

Others argue that this epic wealth benefits the global economy by ensuring that the world’s innovators and creators have the funds they need to spearhead new technology and innovation.

So, what if we got rid of the world’s billionaires and redistributed their wealth, or capped people’s earnings below a billion dollars?

What would that look like? Would we think of the world differently? Would our institutions improve, or would we all lose the globe’s leading wealth creators and investors?

We asked some of the world’s leading economists and social campaigners for their opinions.

Would innovation stop?

The abolition of billionaires is a nonsensical idea, and if it were to happen in a fantasy-scape, it would spell complete disaster for our developed economies.

The vast majority of billionaires in the West created the immense wealth that they now own … simply through the creation of products, services, and other items which we as a society have freely purchased.

“Billionaires” are individuals who have wealth exceeding $1bn – this consists of shares in companies, ownership of intellectual property (IP), land, property, or tangible goods. The wealth they have is theoretical – they do not sit on a bank pile of 1 billion $1 notes, nor do they have a swimming pool of gold bullion.

Many of the billionaires we know may be worth a billion today or a million tomorrow, depending on how these shares or IP perform. This may sound elementary, but it is important.

Billionaires have an inherent interest in growing their wealth and therefore to grow productive, profitable, problem-solving companies.

TRUMP INAUGURATION
(L-R) Priscilla Chan, Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg, Lauren Sanchez, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Tesla CEO Elon Musk attend US President Donald Trump’s inauguration ceremony [File: Chip Somodevilla/AFP]

See Nvidia, which issues shares to its staff and is at the forefront of the AI revolution, or SpaceX, which has opened up satellite communication for the masses and benefits us all.

Now, let us invert this issue – if we abolish billionaires, these exceptional individuals do not have the incentive to fix these problems, we all lose utility, and problems remain.

That would be a terrible thing for society.

Maxwell Marlow, director of public affairs, Adam Smith Institute

What if wealth was fairly distributed?

Billionaires need to be taxed — but from the perspective of the Global South, the real question is where.

Firstly, it should not be looked at as the Robin Hood type of distribution. Secondly, if they are taxed only in their country of residence, does that reflect where their wealth was actually created?

Wealth is not produced solely by investment. It is built on resources and labour. In today’s global economy, much of that comes from the Global South. It follows, then, that tax revenues should also flow back to the places from which that wealth is extracted.

Take Antwerp. It is a beautiful city whose residents enjoy high living standards. But the foundations of that prosperity lie in diamonds from the [Democratic Republic of the] Congo, where living standards have barely risen. We have to ask why we have these different outcomes. This is not about charity; it is about restructuring global finance to make it fair.

Inequality has surged over the past 30 to 40 years. Extreme wealth of the kind we see today was taxed at 97–98 percent in the form of high marginal tax rates above a threshold, based on what amounted to a global consensus that such concentrations of wealth were unhealthy — and that the money was better directed to health, welfare and education.

Demonstrators against inequality march to the office of the president in downtown Nairobi, Kenya Friday, Jan. 17, 2020. The march kicks off a week of planned global protests aimed at calling for an end to the
Demonstrators against inequality march to the office of the president in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, Friday, January 17, 2020 [Ben Curtis/AP]

Today, in moments of economic crisis, governments often impose austerity, pushing the burden onto the poor and middle class. That shift is new.

We need structural change — not simply new billionaire taxes. Otherwise, we face an existential problem if we leave the structures that reproduce inequality intact: individuals whose wealth gives them more power than many governments.

Extreme wealth is concentrating, becoming a political force, and entrenching an oligarchic system replicated worldwide — including in the Global South, where much

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