The Guardian view on inequality and the
super-rich: the status quo is unsustainable
Editorial
Growing private wealth, combined with public
austerity, is undermining the health of western democracies
Tue 23 Jan
2024 19.20 GMT
In an
intriguing study about to be published, the Dutch political philosopher Ingrid
Robeyns poses a question that very rarely gets asked in mainstream politics.
When it comes to the personal income and assets of the super-rich, how much is
too much? The answer, she suggests in Limitarianism: The Case Against Extreme
Wealth, should be anything above €10m. At that point, taxation should
intervene, redeploying the surplus for the common good.
Ms Robeyns
is not naive. She thinks of her €10m figure as a guiding ideal to be striven
for, but one that is unlikely ever to become a reality given the current way of
the world. Quite. Nevertheless, her provocative intervention is valuable,
because it draws attention to a curious disjunction: as the wealthy have got
steadily richer in recent times, soaking up the benefits of free capital
movement, share price surges and rising asset values, political talk about
wealth taxes has diminished to a barely audible murmur.
In
pre-election Britain, the Labour party has flatly refused to contemplate
“mansion” taxes on property, an increase to capital gains tax, or higher top
rates of income tax. Across the rest of Europe, there has been a similar
reluctance to address an asset wealth boom comprehensively analysed in Thomas
Piketty’s influential work, Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Meanwhile,
cash-strapped governments – and the European Union as a collective entity –
struggle to find resources to deal with colossal challenges relating to the
green transition and reviving moribund economies.
This ugly
combination of undertaxed private wealth and public austerity not only gets in
the way of necessary and broad-based economic renewal. It is an active source
of social divisions, resentment and corrosive conspiracy theories – to an
extent that is endangering the health of democracies. This should hardly come
as a revelation. Writing in the 4th century BC, Plato prescribed that in the
interests of political stability, richer citizens should have no more than four
times the property of the poorest. In our own time, the far right is
successfully piggy-backing on eroding faith in politics to prosecute its own
authoritarian agenda.
Ms Robeyns
is not alone in sounding the alarm. In another new book, the Labour MP and
former Treasury minister Liam Byrne makes similar points about our age’s
normalisation of an “absurd affluence”. Last week, a report published by Oxfam
found that, while the wages of more than 800 million workers have failed to
keep pace with inflation, the wealth of billionaires has grown three times as
fast since 2020. The damning statistics are all out there. But still the sun
never seems to set on the vacuous trickle-down theory of economics first
popularised by Ronald Reagan.
The
prospect of any version of “limitarianism” finding its way into a manifesto is
therefore remote. But it is past time for social democratic parties, in
particular, to show less deference towards the interests of the very wealthy in
ever more unequal societies. Backed by Mr Piketty among others, two social
democrat MEPs have launched a citizens’ petition calling for a European wealth
tax to help finance the green transition. A million signatures would mean the
European Commission had to listen. But when it comes to questions of “how much
is too much?”, it should not be left to individual citizens to force the pace.
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