|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Sunday Times details enormous gains for the
super-rich
By Simon Whelan
14 May 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The publication of this years annual Sunday Times
Rich List catalogues the financial bonanza enjoyed by the super
rich living in Britain over the last 12 months. In addition, it
illustrates how London in particular has become the virtual tax-free
playground for this parasitic social layer.
Last years list was noteworthy because for the first
time since the recession of the early 1990s the combined wealth
of the British super rich was estimated to have fallen slightly.
This year it is safe to say that normal service has been resumed,
and then some. The super-rich who reside in Britain are almost
30 percent richer than last year.
With headlines like Theyre bouncing up by the billion,
the Sunday Times was almost beside itself with glee at
news that this years increase was the highest rise since
the list began 16 years ago. The top 1,000 richest British residents
have accumulated over £200 billion between them. In one
year their fortunes have increased at 15 times the current inflation
rate.
It now requires a fortune of £40 million to break the
threshold onto the hallowed list. In the last four years their
collective wealth has almost doubled from the £115 billion
recorded in 2000. The richest 50 people in Europe increased their
wealth over the past year by a slightly less spectacular 22 percent.
And significantly the worlds top 50 enjoyed much smaller
gains of 3.8 percent compared to those based in and around London.
This veritable wealth explosion and the coalescence of the
international super-rich in the British capital are the outcome
of a number of interconnected factors. The City of London financial
district is emerging as a key command centre of global finance;
Britain is now one of the worlds most popular tax havens;
and birds of a feather tend to flock together when the nesting
is so luxurious and the political climate so amicable.
Under British law foreigners may only be taxed on their UK
incomes, rather than their international incomes. Consequently
the super-rich from around the world can live in London and pay
a pittance in taxes. No other large economy offers such generous
terms to the international bourgeoisie. The non-domicile tax rule
furnishes the lavish lifestyles of approximately 100,000 of the
worlds super-rich living in London and surrounding areas.
By way of comparison Monaco, a long established tax haven, has
a population of 32,000.
With so many of the worlds super-rich residing in London,
a hyper exclusive social infrastructure has emerged to pander
to their every whim. Outrageously expensive shops, boutiques,
restaurants and gymnasiums compete to offer the most luxurious,
pretentious and over priced services to the growing band of international
billionaires.
In addition to these factors the super-rich have profited greatly
from a grossly over-inflated property price bubble and favourable
circumstances on international financial markets. Britain also
has the lowest top rate taxation in Europe, as well as minimal
corporate regulation, a low wage workforce and high levels of
workplace exploitation. New Labour, especially Prime Minister
Tony Blair, welcomes the super-rich with open arms and not infrequently
an open government chequebook.
Under such circumstances it is little wonder that London has
become a playground not just for the British elite, but also a
significant section of the worlds filthy rich.
The Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, who recently added Chelsea
Football Club to his already bulging portfolio, is now the richest
man living in Britain. Currently residing in either his luxury
Belgravia property or his 440 acre West Sussex mansion, he is
said to be loving life in the British capital. With a fortune
estimated at £7.5 billion, he increases his wealth by a
cool £441.2 million a yearor to put it in more manageable
terms £50,000 an hour. Nice work if you can get it, but
of course not everyone can. Least of all the Russian population
from whom Abramovich stole his riches during the carve up of the
Soviet Unions public assets by the Stalinist nomenklatura
and their criminal hangers-on.
The bulk of Abramovichs wealth comes from Sibneft, the
oil business he bought from the now exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky
in 1995. Abramovich was left in charge once Berezovsky fled Russia.
The Russian has a further estimated £1 billion in holdings,
mainly in aluminium and pharmaceuticals.
In total, 67 of this years top 1,000 have increased their
wealth by more than £100 million. Three, including Sir Richard
Branson, increased their pile by £1 billion or more.
Abramovich knocked the Duke of Westminster with his £5
billion property empire off the top spot. But ownership of property
still maintains one in four entries on the list. Prominent gains
were also posted by those engaged in hedge funds. Six hedge fund
multi-millionaires in this years list have made huge returns.
In some cases London salaries are ahead of New York, with managing
directors controlling complex derivatives making bonuses of £1.5
million on average. Some are making even more.
Other billionaires born outside of Britain find London conducive
to their bank accounts. Another recent Sunday Times study
found that 40 dollar billionaires reside in the British capital,
more than any other city in the world. London is home to a record
ten of the richest people in Europe.
Abramovich is not alone in possessing such fabulous amounts
of money that he need not bother to count it. A recent criminal
case was highly illuminating regarding the lifestyles of the rich
and famous. Joyti De-Laurey, a secretary for investment bankers
Goldman-Sachs, was charged with stealing from the banks
top executives.
Apparently the executives in question failed to notice millions
of pounds missing from their private accounts. Husband and wife
team Ron Beller (who spent £86,000 on personal travel last
year) and Jennifer Moses (whose last birthday party cost £500,000)
did not notice over a million pound missing from their account
and admitted they previously thought that De-Laurey had stolen
a million or two, but did nothing about it because life
was too short.
Another victim, Edward Scott Mead, only noticed missing funds
when he tried to make a £1 million donation to Harvard.
For her part De-Laurey, who used the cash to buy into her employers
lavish lifestyle, claimed she took the money because it
was easy.
For Abramovich and those at Goldman-Sachs, todays London
is akin to Batistas Havana in the 1950s: a city where every
public asset and everyone in power has a price. While the citys
infrastructure and public services fall apart at the seams, the
ability of the super-rich to access exclusive private services
means they are oblivious to such social devastation. New Labours
hero worship of the super-rich has meant that London and by extension
the country as a whole is effectively run for the benefit of this
tiny parasitic social layer.
The super-rich might not necessarily be able to count their
fortunes but they sure know how to spend it. Those listed are
responsible for a 100 percent increase in the number of super-yachts
in the world. Abramovich recently revealed the refitted interior
to his £72 million Pelorus yacht that requires a crew of
40 and costs £7 million a year to run.
The influx of super-rich has come as a boon unto the London
luxury home market. The Sunday Times recently reported
how Lakshmi Mittal, up seven places to fifth richest in this years
list, paid an incredible £70 million for a mansion in Kensington
Palace. The white stucco fronted mansion is now the worlds
most expensive property. The former owner is Formula One racing
boss and sometime New Labour donor Bernie Ecclestone, who unsurprisingly
also figures prominently in the rich list top ten.
Only weeks earlier the real estate company Candy & Candy
said it sold an apartment in Chelsea for £27 million. This
is the most expensive apartment of its kind in the world, the
company told Press Association newswire. Properties in Chelsea
and Kensington regularly now sell for £10 million.
London also has the most expensive office space. A report by
Cushman & Wakefield Healy & Baker stated in March that
a square metre in Mayfair now costs almost £900 a year,
compared to rates approximately half that in both Paris and New
York. Bloomberg.com recently told its readers not to even think
about car parking space in LondonYou cant afford
it, they declared.
Economic, social and political policy is so heavily weighted
in favour of the super-rich in Britain that the Sunday Times
admitted difficulty in compiling a losers table. Put most
simply, the super-rich cannot lose in Britain. The old market
traders cry Everyones a winner! actually applies
to these layers in Blairs London.
See Also:
Blair-Bush alliance
is an expression of the reemergence of naked imperialism and colonialism
24 March 2004]
Britain: Report highlights
widespread child poverty
[8 October 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |