Oxfam report highlights how billionaires rig politics

oxfam report
Graph: Oxfam report Resisting the Rule of the Rich. Protecting freedom from billionaire power

Oxfam’s latest global inequality report, released during the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 19, also reveals how billionaires use their extreme wealth to keep profiteering and keep an infrastructure of sympathetic politicians, media and bureaucracies in place.

Resisting the Rule of the Rich. Protecting freedom from billionaire power found that, globally, billionaire wealth rose by more than 16% in 2025 — reaching a record $18.3 trillion.

One the report’s more alarming statistics is that, last year, “billionaire wealth increased three times faster than the average annual rate over the previous five years”.

Since 2020, Oxfam said, billionaire wealth has grown by a whopping 81%. “Billionaires fortunes have grown at a rate three times faster than the previous five years since the election of Donald Trump in November 2024.”

How the super-rich use their extreme wealth to stay rich is important to understand, the report said, if civil society is going to be able to break the pattern. While the gap between rich and poor is growing, with the super-rich becoming more concentrated, it says the mechanisms the billionaires deploy are a direct challenge to democracy.

The report argues that billionaires’ massive wealth allows them to subvert democratic institutions, including by spending big on legal costs to thwart any legal challenge to their methods.

It points out that Trump’s championing of deregulation and his undermining of agreements to raise corporate taxes have benefited the rich and powerful.

Trump’s presidency brings into sharp relief what billionaire rule means for the capitalist system; it exposes its democratic façade as well as its potential to further deepen inequality.

The report points out how billionaires use different mechanisms to directly undermine democracy. They include buying politicians and political parties which pledge to serve their interests and implement pro-capitalist policies. Billionaires also own, and therefore control, the mainstream media and artificial intelligence, which they use to promote far-right politics, including scapegoating refugees, migrants and other oppressed groups for capitalism’s failures.

The report said that, worldwide, billionaires are at least 4000 times more likely to hold political office than non-billionaires.

Furthermore, it said that growing economic inequality plays a major role in laying the ground for increased authoritarianism. This is evident in how governments are actively seeking to repress the mass Palestine solidarity movements and Trump’s neo-fascist Immigration and Customs Enforcement which are on a killing and terror spree.

In Australia, new federal and state anti-protest laws which undermine hard-won civil rights and democratic space to campaign, will also widen economic inequality.

The lesson, which Oxfam seeks to draw out, is that growing global inequality is a direct threat to our democratic rights; democracy is fragile when the world’s 12 richest billionaires have more wealth than the poorest half of humanity — more than four billion people.

Economic inequality becomes political inequality, Oxfam said, adding that any resistance to extraordinary economic hardship is met with greater repression.

However, it said this system is not inevitable and people have to resist it. We agree. People-powered movements for change are erupting in the face of far-right repression.

Heroic examples include the Italian dockworkers, who led global actions against the genocide in Gaza. Despite severe state repression, masses of people in Iran continue to resist autocracy and repression. And the mass protests and strikes against ICE in Minnesota are a sign that Americans are becoming organised.

Green Left is committed to building resistance to the billionaires and their governments’ repression. We first launched 35 years ago and, with your help, we continue to promote the movements that are directly challenging the power of the billionaire class.

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