PANDEMIC PROFITS FOR COMPANIES SOAR BY BILLIONS MORE AS POOREST PAY PRICE
Some corporations are cashing in on COVID-19 on behalf of the wealthiest
Thirty-two of the world’s largest companies stand to see their profits jump by $109 billion more in 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic lays bare an economic model that delivers profits for the wealthiest
on the back of the poorest, according to a new Oxfam report today.
Power, Profits and the Pandemic,
published ahead of tomorrow’s six-month anniversary of the declaration of the pandemic, also outlines how COVID-19 has made things even worse by encouraging corporations around the globe to put profits
before workers’ safety, push costs and risks down the supply chain and use their political influence to shape policy responses.
“COVID-19 has been tragic for the many but good for a privileged few,” said Oxfam International Executive Director Chema Vera. “The economic crisis we are suffering because of the pandemic has
been fueled by a rigged economic model. The world’s largest corporations are making billions at the expense of low wage workers and funneling profits to shareholders and billionaires – a small group of largely white men in rich nations.”
Globally, half a billion people are expected to be pushed into poverty by the economic fallout from the pandemic. 400 million jobs have already been lost and the International Labor Organization
estimates that more than 430 million small enterprises are at risk. Meanwhile, the protection given to shareholders has fueled a share price boom. The top 100 stock market winners have added more than $3 trillion to their market value since the pandemic. As
a result, the 25 richest billionaires have increased their wealth by staggering amounts. Jeff Bezos could personally pay each of Amazon’s 876,000 employees a one-time $105,000 bonus today and still be as wealthy as he was at the beginning of the pandemic.
“It is sickening that, in the middle of a pandemic, some corporations are paying-out massive dividends to wealthy shareholders having received government bailouts meant to protect jobs,” continued
Vera. “Scarce resources are being handed to the already super wealthy at a time when hundreds of millions of people are suffering the consequences of this pandemic. Women, racial and ethnic minorities or migrants are being significantly impacted.”
The report outlines how corporations have exacerbated the economic impacts of the pandemic by funneling profits to shareholders instead of investing in better jobs and climate-friendly technology,
paying their fair share of taxes, and prioritizing profits over people. The report sets out examples including:
Oxfam finds that many companies’ ability to cope with the economic damage wreaked by the pandemic and take care of their employees has been severely undermined by years of increased payments
to shareholders; some companies having handed over amounts significantly greater than their profits.
From 2016 to 2019, 59 of the world’s most profitable companies in the US, Europe, South Korea, Australia, India, Brazil, Nigeria and South Africa distributed almost $2 trillion to their shareholders,
with pay-outs averaging 83% of earnings.
The three largest healthcare companies in South Africa - Netcare, Mediclinic and Life Healthcare Group - paid out a staggering 163% of their profits to shareholders through dividends and share buy-backs.
Oxfam is calling for a response to the immediate crisis that prioritizes support for workers and small businesses. It includes establishing a COVID -19 Pandemic Profits Tax to ensure shared sacrifice,
and the redeployment of resources away from those cashing in on the pandemic and toward those bearing the burden. Long term, Oxfam is asking policymakers and corporations to re-balance corporate purpose, profits and power away from exclusively benefiting executives
and shareholders towards workers, suppliers, consumers and communities. A corporate reform agenda should ensure every worker is paid a living wage, has a safe place to work and a voice in the workplace before a single dividend is paid to shareholders. Corporations
must pay their fair share of tax and policy makers must rein in corporate power to stop them from rigging the rules.
“We are at a critical juncture. We have a choice between returning to ‘business as usual’ or learning from this moment to design a fairer and more sustainable economy,” said Vera. “Some of the
captains of capitalism have jumped on the bandwagon and promised to move away from a shareholder first model. This talk is cheap. The pandemic must be the catalyst for reining in corporate power, restructuring business models with purpose and rewarding all
those that work with profits, creating an economy for all.
“Unless we change course, economic inequality will increase,” said Vera. “Now is the time to shore up small businesses, workers and democratic institutions – not an even smaller number of large
corporations that are exerting greater economic and political power.”
Notes to editors:
For our social media toolkit you can find it here:
https://spark.adobe.com/page/dRiCjmdwN8HDZ/.
For our webpage: https://www.oxfam.org/en/cashing-coronavirus-crisis-5-ways-which-corporations-are-exacerbating-inequality
Irit
Irit Tamir
| Director, Private Sector Department
Oxfam America | Boston | O: +1 ((617) 728 2447 | M: +1 (617) 888 4920
www.oxfamamerica.org
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