wealth
Capitalism is not so bad for some people...
Thai mass media say that the first and only president of the USSR Mikhail Gorbachev bought a mansion in Phuket, Thailand. This island, with lots of wealthy inhabitants, is considered one of the most popular in the country.
For example, the other day F1 driver Kimi Raikkonen bought there a $1,5 million house. Local newspapers say that Gorbachev is to become Raikkonen’s neighbor, who is thought to have bought a mansion in the same complex called ‘Serenity Terraces’.
Read also: Mikhail Gorbachev advertises Louis Vuitton bags to make his living
However, this information is difficult to be checked. Thai laws don’t let foreigners buy detached houses, only detached apartments are available. So all Thai mansions are registered on specially created local juridical people and it’s difficult to identify who the real owner is.
Tanslated by Lena Ksandinova
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Gap between rich and poor widens
Gap between rich and poor widens
The gap between the richest and poorest households is widening, with high earners bringing home 15 times more than those on low incomes, official figures show.
The richest 20% of households had average incomes of £72,900 before taxes and benefits in 2006/07, compared with an average of just £4,900 for the poorest fifth of households, the Office for National Statistics said.
Even after income redistribution through taxes and benefits, the richest households still had nearly six times more disposable income than the poorest ones, at £56,110 compared with £10,110.
The ONS said disposable income inequality between the richest and poorest households had increased from a ratio of five to one between 2004/05 and 2006/07 to remain high by historical standards. It added that despite a fall in inequality during the early part of this decade, the large increases that took place during the second half of the 1980s had not been reversed.
The group said the latest increase in inequality was partly caused by a growing difference in the salaries of the best and worst paid, as well as slower growth in the level of benefits paid compared with rises in earnings.
Overall, the richest fifth of households paid an average of £18,460 in direct taxes and received around £1,680 in benefits, while the poorest households received benefits worth £6,450 and paid just £1,240 in tax.
Retired households gained most from income redistribution, paying the least tax and receiving the highest level of benefits, while single parents were also big winners.
But most other pre-retirement households paid more tax than they received back in benefits, although households with children did better than those without.
Cash benefits such as income support, pension credit, child benefit, incapacity benefit and the state pension played the biggest role in reducing income inequality.
For the poorest 20% of households, cash benefits made up 57% of their income, while they made up 38% for the second poorest fifth, but contributed just 2% to the richest fifth. By contrast the highest fifth of earners lost 25% of their income to direct taxes, while the poorest fifth paid only 11% of theirs.
15% worse than 2003
15% worse than 2003
Britons are 15% worse off than they were five years ago following massive hikes in the cost of living, research shows.
After paying tax and meeting monthly household bills, the average family now has less than 20% of their gross income left, compared with 28% in 2003/2004, according to accountants Ernst & Young.
The group said households were left with an average of only £772.79 to spend each month after paying all of their fixed monthly outgoings, down from £909.84 five years earlier.
It added that the squeeze on people's disposable income had accelerated rapidly over the past year.
Jason Gordon, director of retail at Ernst & Young, said: "Many UK consumer segments are clearly feeling the pinch as big rises in household costs are far outstripping relatively modest wage inflation."
The group found that fixed monthly household costs had soared by nearly 45% during the past five years, to take up 53% of people's total pay.
Homeowners are shelling out 78% more in mortgage repayments than in 2003/2004 at an average of £735 a month, due to a combination of higher interest rates and people taking out bigger mortgages.
Monthly energy bills have leapt by 110% during the period to average £95.80, while petrol costs for the typical family are 29% higher at £193.61.
Other costs have also increased, with unsecured debt repayments, such as on loans, credit cards and overdrafts, rising by 44% since 2003/2004 to take up £114.81 of people's income, while council tax is 25% higher at around £114.50.
People are also now typically contributing £255.20 into a defined benefit pension each month, up from £144.26 five years ago.
Rich get richer....
Rich get richer....
Every year The Sunday Times Rich List publishes to a grand jangley fanfare across the country's media. Collectively the group of British citizens, residents and hangers on in the list are worth £280billion, up from £245billion last year. So the rich just keep getting richer.
US inequality
US inequality
US household incomes fail to grow
US households have failed to benefit from the strong economic growth in the last six years of expansion.
Despite an economy that expanded by 18% since 2000, real income for the median family fell by 1.1% from 2000 to 2006.
Job creation was much slower as well, with jobs growing by just 0.6% per year, one-third of the previous rate.
But people at the top of the income distribution, the top 1%, tripled their income between 1989 and 2006, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
"While most Americans were struggling, the good times were rolling for the top 10%," said EPI president Lawrence Michel.
With the US economy now slowing, household income is likely to fall further behind, the group predicts, with African-American and Hispanic households especially hard-hit.
Income boost
The US Census, however, in a report released on Tuesday, said that real incomes had increased by 1.3% between 2006 and 2007, while poverty and inequality had stabilised or declined.
The Census also said that the number of people not covered by health insurance decreased from 47 million (15.8%) to 45.7 million (15.3%) - although it was an increase in government health insurance coverage of children that was responsible for most of that change.
But the new figures do not change the basic thrust of the EPI report, according to the organisation's chief economist and Obama advisor -Jared Bernstein.
He argues that the recent changes in the tax system have exacerbated the trends in pre-tax inequality of income, something the Obama campaign has pledged to reverse.
"When income concentration creates barriers to the resources and opportunities that would enable people to get ahead on their own initiative and efforts, that violates our fundamental sense of fairness," he says.
Jobless recovery
Mr Bernstein points to the weakness of job growth during the economic recovery that began in 2001.
It took four years to regain the jobs lost in the 2001 recession, while the unemployment rate actually increased from 4% in 2000 to 4.6% in 2006 (it is now 5.5% and rising fast).
However, productivity in the economy grew more quickly, as firms shed jobs despite the economic boom.
As a result, the EPI calculates that 90% of the growth in the economy between 1989 and 2006 went to the top 10%.
The inequality of US incomes is such that the top 10% of households receive 40% of all household income, while the bottom 90% receive the remaining 60%.
The big disparities in income, coupled with the rising cost of higher education, have hurt the chances of poorer Americans improving their job and income prospects by completing a college education.
For example, in 2005 only 30% of low income students with high test scores were able to finish college, as compared to 74% of high income students with equivalent scores.
The study points out that social mobility in the US has been broadly unchanged for decades, with around 40% of Americans staying in the same income quintile they started in, with only one in five moving more than one income group up or down the scale.
Regional disparities
The US census data also points to big regional disparities in income and wealth across America.
The richest suburbs - around Washington, DC and New York City - have median household incomes of over $100,000 (£54,600) per year, while the poorest counties in the rural South had median incomes of under $30,000.
Poverty is also concentrated in the South, with nearly 30% of children in poverty in Mississippi, compared to just 8.8% in New Hampshire.
Among big cities, the lowest median income was in Detroit, Michigan, with median household income of just $28,000.
Credit crunch problems
The credit crunch, which is pushing many poor owner-occupiers into mortgage arrears and foreclosure, could further reduce household income and wealth in Midwest cities like Detroit and Cleveland.
It may also increase poverty rates in high-cost areas like Southern California, where many sub-prime loans are concentrated.
On the other hand, the effects of the economic slowdown might actually reduce some measures of inequality by sharply reducing the value of shares and housing assets held by richer households.
But if unemployment begins to increase sharply, it is likely to hit the income of the poor, the less well educated, and black and Hispanic households hardest.
Budget dilemma
The figures could pose dilemmas for both Presidential candidates, who have been promising help for hard-pressed families hit by higher fuel costs, mortgage foreclosures, and lack of health care coverage.
The slowdown is also likely to increase the size of the US budget deficit, while making it more expensive to fund measures to take people out of poverty and provide universal health care.
The Census Bureau has new figures which show the dramatic effects of government policy on poverty. It calculates that food stamps have lifted 1.8m people out of poverty, while earned income tax credits have helped 1.7m.
However, it is the more generously funded US social security system, the government pension scheme, that has the most dramatic effect on poverty. Without it, the number of elderly people in poverty would quadruple to 16m, effectively increasing the poverty rate by 50%.
The future funding of the social security system is one of the key issues in the policy debate between the two candidates.
The average median household income in the US in 2007 was $50,233. Those in the top 10% earned $136,000 or more, while the bottom 10% had a median income of $12,200. The national poverty line for a family of 2 adults and 2 children was $21, 027, and 37.3m people lived in poverty on that definition.
forbes 400
forbes 400
The Forbes 400: America's richest
By Matthew Miller and Duncan Greenberg
The rich haven't gotten richer - or poorer - this year. The price of admission to this, the 27th edition of The Forbes 400, is £710 million for the second year in a row. The assembled net worth of America's wealthiest rose by £16.45 billion - only 2% - to £860 billion.
Rising prices of oil and art paved the way for 31 new members and eight returnees, while volatile stock and housing markets forced 33 plutocrats from our rankings.
With a net worth of £31.25 billion, Bill Gates remains the richest man in America despite losing his crown to Warren Buffett for a few months this spring. Buffett's shares in Berkshire Hathaway have fallen 15% since February.
Newcomers to the list include fertilizer tycoon Alexander Rovt, car dealer and art collector Norman Braman and Patrón tequila founder John Paul DeJoria. Also new: Mark Zuckerberg, the 24-year-old founder of social networking site Facebook, who debuts on The Forbes 400 with an estimated net worth of £820 million.
Among the returnees are Urban Outfitters chief Richard Hayne and Gap founders Donald and Doris Fisher, who rode the swelling contemporary-art market back onto the list. The couple's art collection is believed to be worth more than £550 million.
The Forbes 400 is a snapshot of estimated wealth on Aug. 29, 2008, the day we locked in prices of publicly traded stocks.
Given how unsettled the stock market is, some of those on our list will become significantly richer or poorer within weeks - even days - of publication. Many, including AIG shareholders Eli Broad and Steven Udvar-Hazy, have lost hundreds of millions of dollars.
The average net worth of The Forbes 400 is £2.14 billion.
The biggest loser this year was casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, whose fortune has fallen £7.13 billion in the past 12 months - £0.82 million per hour - as shares of his Las Vegas Sands have dropped 75% from their all-time highs last October. Fellow casino kingpin Kirk Kerkorian lost £3.73 billion this year as his stock in MGM Mirage fell 70% since last fall. Other tycoons who have lost big bucks this year include Min Kao of global positioning system maker Garmin (down £1.59 billion), Google guys Sergey Brin and Larry Page (down £1.48 billion and £1.43 billion, respectively), eBay founder Pierre Omidyar (down £1.43 billion) and media maven Sumner Redstone (down £1.37 billion). This year's biggest gainer is New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose estimated net worth rose £4.66 billion after he bought back a 20% stake in his financial data and news firm Bloomberg L.P. from Merrill Lynch this summer, finally putting a price tag on the private media outfit.
Several Forbes 400 veterans fell off the list this year. Among them: former AIG head Maurice (Hank) Greenberg and former eBay chief Margaret Whitman.
Two-thirds of the members of The Forbes 400 have fortunes that are entirely self-made, while only 19% of the group inherited their entire fortunes.
There are 42 women on the list with an average net worth of £2.3 billion. Oprah Winfrey saw her wealth increase £109.65 million to £1.48 billion.
Six members of last year's list died, including potato king John Simplot and building supplies magnate Kenneth Hendricks. He is replaced by his wife, Diane. Other deaths included medical device inventor James Sorenson and Cargill heir John Hugh MacMillan III.
US inequality worsens-
US inequality worsens- Government Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%
The recession, which officially lasted from December 2007 to June 2009, saw the share of total household wealth going to the bottom 80 percent of the population fall by 2.2 percentage points to 12.8 percent. The wealthiest 1 percent increased its net worth to 225 times that of the typical household, the highest ratio on record.
About one quarter of households have zero or negative wealth. With homeowners’ equity down 35 percent since 2007, the banking industry now owns the majority of the nation’s housing stock.Data gathered by economist Emanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley reveals that in 2008 the top one-hundredth of one percent of households—1 in 10,000—took home an average of $27 million per household, while the average for the bottom 90 percent was $31,244. The average worker earned 1/185th of the amount taken in by a typical CEO.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the top 1 percent of income tax filers, those who made nearly $2 million in 2007, saw their share of the national after-tax income increase by about 130 percent as compared to 1979. The bottom four quintiles saw their share decline by between 10 and 30 percent.
Also in 2007—before the catastrophic decline in home values, the major source of wealth for most families—1 percent of households controlled 34.6 percent of the national wealth, while the bottom 90 percent shared 26.9 percent.
As Karl Marx noted in Capital, “Accumulation of wealth at one pole is… at the same time accumulation of misery, agony of toil, slavery, ignorance, brutality, mental degradation at the opposite pole.” So it is in America in the second decade of the 21stCentury.
A recent report from the Food Research and Action Center finds that a record 44.2 million people in the US, one in seven, relied on food stamp programs in January, up by more than 4.7 million in one year. One in five Americans struggled to find enough to eat in 2010, according to the group.One in four US children live below the official poverty level, 16 million in all, and 1.5 million children experience homelessness each year. Untold millions of households subsist without heat, light or running water.
Davos WEF 2011: Wealth
Davos WEF 2011: Wealth inequality is the "most serious challenge for the world"
Wealth inequality is the most serious challenge facing the world in the years ahead, senior business figures heard at the World Economic Forum in Davos today........ .Sir Martin and Mr Zhu pointed to statistics that showed inequality peaked in 1929 and 2007, directly before the two most devastating crisis in the past 100 years. In the US, the top 1pc owned 47pc of the wealth in 2007. By comparison, in 1968 the top 1pc owned 28pc of the wealth.
“Wealth inequality is
“Wealth inequality is the most serious challenge facing the world in the years ahead” . Strikes me that communists aren’t very good at wrestling this subject out of the hands of leftists. I’ve had a series of arguments with people lately about how the fight against the cuts (while absolutely necessary) cant be won – capitalism today has no option but to attack the working class, any minor defences the class wins will be temporary. We (or is that just me) need better arguments when we hear that banksters bonuses, bank bailouts, oligarch robberies, financiers greed etc are the cause of the cuts, and thus the cuts are reversible.And on another issue, while there’s a lot of anger and resentment about such inequality, it seems interesting that there is no significant bourgeois faction making a issue of it (to keep it on their terrain) – is this an indication that the bourgeoisie see widespread class struggle as a busted flush?
Sorry but the communists are
Sorry but the communists are right, it can only get worse as time goes by for the class under capitaliism.
Any struggle can act as a launch pad to a massive class war, like flicking lighted matches into a bone dry forest.
The matches go out, the forest gets drier, one of the matches burns the lot down.
There's no winning for the class whilst capitalism endures.
Some may get a better positioned deckchair on the Titanic, that's not our cause.
As to the bourgeoisie keeping quiet about the gap, well, it' s not totally ignored, but what do you expect?
They'll have half the population on benzos and antidepressants as they churn out the old songs of good times to come...
Shug The bourgeosie have seen
Shug The bourgeosie have seen the working class as a busted flush for decades (in the UK once the miners' strike was over as we predicted at the time it would take years to recover). Hence the Labour Party under Blair could drop all pretence to be anything other than a party of capital. The entire political framework of the communist left is predicated on the framework of the revival of the working class so it is no surprise that our progress is slow (but at least it is progress!). In the current situation our perspective has to be to keep on saying what we said in Aurora on March 26 that all the austerity in the world will not save capitalism and the fight is not against the cuts as such (although we do take part in that fight) but the system as whole. We criticise the capitalist left for pretending that the aim of our fight is simply to get "the coalition out" or some such formula (we noticed on March 26 that Aurora had the only anti-capitalist headline on view (and I was looking for others) and many people told us they took it for precisely that reason). The current arrogance of the state and the capitalist lefts campaigns may seem more relavant to most people now but our task is to give the perspective for where we will be in a year or so's time. The cuts have not provoked the united and widespread response you might have expected but mainly because most of them came in at the start of this financial year (last week). Our task in the months ahead is to keep hammering away at the ideas that we have always maintained. This is not just a banking crisis but the latter was a symptom of a much deeper crisis related to the end of the cycle of accumulation in the early 70s and "sorting out the banks" won't solve it. We need to get more people to unite around this message and reinforce the ranks of internationalists as part of the preparation for wider class movements ahead. We cannot manufacture them but we can at least get into a position to make an impact on them when they do occur. Nil desperandum!
Yup, no argument with any of
Yup, no argument with any of that. The hammering that the working class in Russia and America have suffered over the past 20 years without any significant fight-back is worrying though.