According to a report commissioned by the
South African Presidency of the G20, global inequality has reached “emergency”
levels, threatening democracy, economic stability, and progress on climate
change. The report was prepared by the G20 Extraordinary Committee of
Independent Experts on Global Inequality, which was led by Nobel Prize-winning
economist Joseph Stiglitz. The report, while highlighting the emergency levels
of global inequality, recommends setting up a body called the International
Panel on Inequality (IPI).
Key Findings of the
Report
¨
India-specific
Findings: The report found that India’s richest 1% expanded its wealth by 62%
between 2000 to 2023.
Global Findings
¨
Overall,
83% of countries (covering nearly 90% of the world’s population) have high
income inequality (having a Gini coefficient above 0.4).
¨ Globally, income inequality between all
individuals in the world has fallen since 2000, due largely to economic
development in China. However, it remains very high, at a Gini coefficient of
0.61.
¨
Globally,
between 2000 and 2024, the richest 1% have captured about 41% of all newly
generated wealth, whereas the poorest 50% received just 1%.
Social and Economic
Consequences
¨
One in
four people globally (2.3 billion) face moderate or severe food insecurity,
i.e., having to regularly skip meals, which is up by 335 million since 2019.
¨ Half the world’s population is still not
covered by essential health services, with 1.3 billion people impoverished by
out-of-pocket health spending.
¨
Countries
with high inequality are estimated to be seven times more likely to experience
institutional and democratic erosion compared to nations with more equitable
wealth distribution.
Drivers of
Inequality
¨
Global
shocks (COVID-19 pandemic, Ukraine conflict, energy-price volatility)
disproportionately hurt low-income households.
¨
Regressive
tax structures, labour-market deregulation, and weak data systems hinder
effective redistribution and monitoring.
Key Recommendations
¨
The
Report calls for establishing a new body, called ‘International Panel on
Inequality (IPI)’, modelled on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC), to support governments and multilateral agencies with authoritative
assessments and analyses of inequality.
The Report calls
for implementing several progressive fiscal measures, including
¨
Wealth
and inheritance taxes (as globally, billionaires pay an effective tax rate
equivalent to only 0.3% of their wealth, contrasting markedly with the minimum
2% tax rate discussed by the G20 in 2024)
¨ Minimum effective corporate tax rates and
curbs on tax havens.
¨
Removal
of regressive subsidies and tax loopholes that favour the ultra-rich.
Learning from the OECD negotiations on the ‘Base Erosion and Profit Shifting’ (BEPS), the ongoing negotiations at the UN towards a Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation provide a historic chance to reform international tax governance comprehensively