|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Americas Fortunate 400 control vast wealth
By David Walsh
7 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The richest four hundred American taxpayers have amassed immense
wealth, and that amount is steadily increasing, according to figures
reported by the Wall Street Journal Wednesday.
The Journal piece and the latest celebration of the
worlds billionaires carried out by Forbes magazine
point to an increasingly and malignantly polarized American and
global social order, with fabulous riches accumulated at one pole
and widespread social wretchedness at the other.
The data published in the Wall Street Journal article
come from an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) study of wealthy US
taxpayers in 2005, an update of a report conducted five years
earlier. The study reveals that the 400 super-richwho represent
approximately .0003 percent of the nations 134 million taxpayersreported
total income of $85.6 billion in 2005, an average of $213.9 million
each.
To be a member of this exclusive crowd, the Fortunate
400, as one academic terms the group, an individual had
to report an income of at least $100.3 million in 2005, a sharp
increase from the $74.5 million such membership would have required
only the year before.
The increase in the fortunes of the 400 wealthiest taxpayers
over the four years 2002-2005 was phenomenal. In 2002 the average
income of the 400 was merely $104.1 million, little
more than the entry level in 2005. The 2002 total
income of the group was $41.6 billion, less than half the 2005
total.
The 400 wealthiest absorbed 1.15 percent of total national
income in 2005 (in other words, three-millionths of the taxpaying
population took in an eighty-seventh of total income), an increase
from 1.02 percent in 2004 and more than double the 0.49 percent
in 1995. After adjusting for inflation, the minimum income required
for entry into the club of 400 has tripled since 1992. This provides
a snapshot of a social process that has gone on uninterruptedly
under both Democratic and Republican administrations.
The Journal emphasizes that the figures actually
understate the group of 400s remarkable performance.
The IRS measured the 2005 earnings by what is known as adjusted
gross income, and does not include tax-exempt interest income
from state and local government bonds. In addition, adjusted gross
income is only calculated after deducting for various expenses,
including moving, alimony and the self-employed health insurance
deduction.
The newspaper also notes, The IRS relied only on what
taxpayers actually reported, without making any independent effort
to estimate unreported income.
The parasitic character of the wealth accumulation found expression
in the fact that a majority of the income accumulated by the super-rich
in 2005 came from capital gainsthe amount by which the selling
price of an asset exceeds the purchase price. Presumably, much
of this came from the stock market boom.
The 400, according to the IRS, reported net capital gains in
2005 of nearly $50 billion, an average of $125 million per tax
return, or 58 percent of their total income.
The Bush tax cuts helped this group enrich itself to the tune
of billions of dollars. The individuals paid an average federal
income tax rate of 18.23 percent in 2005, an increase from 18.16
percent the year prior, but otherwise a lower percentage than
in any year since 1992. The richest 400 paid an average tax rate
of 30 percent as recently as 1995.
It is some measure of the social regression that has occurred
in the US that this tiny handful of obscenely wealthy individuals
paid only slightly more than the average income tax rate for all
taxpayers in 2005, 12.6 percent.
The IRS study reveals that 322 of the 400 reported total salaries
and wages of $7.38 billion, or some $22 million per tax return.
Three hundred ninety three reported income from dividends, some
$5.9 billion, an average of $15 million each.
The $85 billion in income reported by 400 US taxpayers
in a single year is equal to the entire amount that the
Bush administration claims it has committed to helping rebuild
the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, a disaster that
devastated the lives of hundreds of thousands. The income of this
group in 2005 alone could pay off all outstanding student loans
in the US.
Over the last several decades, a transfer of vast amounts of
wealth has taken place in the US, to the benefit of the very rich.
According to Gregory D. Squires, professor of sociology and public
policy and public administration at George Washington University,
Washington, D.C., on the Economic Policy Institute web site, between
1967 and 2005 the share of income going to the top quintile of
all households increased from 43.6 percent to 50.4 percent, while
the share going to the bottom fifth fell from 4 percent to 3.4
percent. In 2004 those in the top one percent experienced a 12.5
percent increase in their incomes while everyone else, the other
99 percent of the population, saw an increase of only 1.5 percent.
In January 2008 workers real hourly and weekly earnings
in the US were both down by 1 percent from the year before.
The IRS figures for 2005, and there is every reason to believe
the process has continued unabated, reveal that the greatest increase
in wealth has occurred within a small layer, a tiny fraction of
the population. These are the people who count in
America, the ones who ultimately decide the economic fate of tens
of millions, determine the principal actions of the two big business
parties and shape the officially-sanctioned public opinion
daily transmitted through the airwaves and in countless newspaper
columns and editorials.
The figures on the Fortunate 400 shocked even quite
respectable members of the establishment. The Journal cited
the comment of Michael Graetz, a professor of law at Yale University
and a Treasury Department official under President George H. W.
Bush: Those numbers are really stunning. One hundred million
dollars is an enormous estate to be accumulated over a lifetime,
and not what we think of as one years income for anybody.
1,125 billionaires worldwide
Meanwhile the worlds billionaires continue to grow fatter
and fatter. This years crop of 1,125, according to Forbes,
are worth a total of $4.4 trillion among them, an increase of
26 percent from the year before. On the annual list published
a year ago, the magazine calculated 946 billionaires, with combined
income of $3.5 trillion.
The existence of this group of financial and corporate predators,
who cohabit the planet with some three billion human beings who
survive (or fail to) on less than $2 a day, is a symptom of a
diseased and doomed social order. In its usual manner, Forbes
treated the cancerous growth of personal wealth as the opportunity
for a special kind of celebrity watch.
Investor Warren Buffett displaced Microsofts Bill Gates
as the worlds richest individual, according to Forbes.
Buffett was worth some $62 billion as of February 11, an increase
of $10 billion from a year ago. Gates gained $2 billion in net
worth during the past 12 months, but lost ground to Buffett as
the result of his companys recent unsolicited bid for Yahoo!
Gates actually slipped to third place, with $58 billion, falling
behind Mexican telecom mogul Carlos Slim Helu ($60 billion).
Reflecting the general drift of the US in the world economy,
only four of the worlds 20 richest individuals were Americans,
down from ten only two years ago. India now claims four of the
worlds ten wealthiest men and women. Russia, 16 years after
the collapse of the Soviet Union, is now home to 87 billionaires,
second only to the US. Germany comes in third, with 59 billionaires.
Of the 226 newcomers to the list, 77 come from the US, half
of whom made their fortunes in finance and investments, including
John Paulson and Philip Falcone, both of whom became wealthy shorting
subprime debt.
In countries where millions go to sleep hungry every night,
a handful is enriching itself. According to Forbes Luisa
Kroll, Another third of the new billionaires comes from
Russia (35), China (28) and India (19). Two of the most noteworthy
new entrants are South Africas Patrice Motsepe and Nigerias
Aliko Dangote, the first black Africans to make their debut among
the worlds richest. Dangote is also the first-ever Nigerian
billionaire.
The social type is revealing. Of Motsepe, Forbes writes:
Over 15 years Motsepe, preaching free market capitalism,
turned a low-level mining services business into the countrys
first black-owned mining company, African Rainbow Minerals, with
2007 revenue of $875 million. Driven by the Asian commodities
boom, ARMs share price has rocketed in the past year from
$12 to $24, pushing the value of Motsepes net worth to $2.4
billion.
The magazine feels obliged to acknowledge: But for all
the adulation, in South Africa such success comes with a price:
being labeled an oligarch. Even many blacks have complained that
the countrys 1994 transformation from apartheid to democracy
has benefited only the elite few. The criticism stems from laws
that require substantial black ownership in certain industries,
including mining. A handful of politically connected individuals
have grown enormously wealthy as a result. One of Motsepes
sisters, Bridgette Radebe, whos married to transport minister
Jeffrey Radebe, heads a mining company and is said to be among
the wealthiest black women in the country.
Overall, Forbes notes that not all is rosy,
pointing out that economic volatility has been wreaking
havoc on these fortunes on a daily basis for months. Hong
Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing lost $5.5 billion of his net worth
over a span of 37 days in January and February. Chinas richest
person, Yang Huiyan, lost some $10 billion over the past year.
Others fell off the list entirely, including Lehman Brothers chief
Richard Fuld and Bear Stearns ex-chief James Cayne (who lost his
job), both victims of the worlds credit crunch,
and William Pulte of Pulte Homes, whose stock collapsed
along with the housing market.
The various reports underscore the state of world capitalism
in 2008: unrestrained growth of social inequality, economic instabilityand
the inevitability of social upheaval.
See Also:
Record Christmas bonuses
on Wall Street
[27 December 2007]
Record inequality
in the US: Billions for Wall Street bosses as workers share
of income shrinks
[20 December 2007]
The filthy rich: Forbes
lists Americas top 400 for 2007
[27 November 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |