Individuals with more than $1 billion in total
assets would be required to pay the equivalent of 2% of their wealth in income
tax, according to the proposal in the report by Gabriel Zucman, a French economist who teaches at the Paris School of Economics.
The report says global billionaires currently pay
the equivalent of 0.3% of their wealth in taxes. It said a 2% tax would raise
$200 billion to $250 billion per year globally from about 3,000 individuals — money that could fund public services such as
education and healthcare as well as the fight against climate change. "The super-rich pay proportionately
less in taxes than other socioeconomic groups," Zucman told journalists,
adding that the practice fuels inequality. He called a progressive tax system a
"key pillar of our democratic societies," essential for strengthening
social cohesion and trust in governments.
In wealth,
billionaires currently own the equivalent of 13% of the world’s GDP, up from 3%
in 1987, according to the new report.
The proposed tax would target
billionaires who do not already pay the equivalent of 2% of their wealth in
income tax, the report said. Most global billionaires probably pay below 2% but
it is difficult to be more precise, Zucman
said.
New G20 member
the African
Union has expressed interest in the
proposal, as well as Belgium, Colombia, France and Spain, he said.
The issue of inequality is a priority for
Brazil in its G20 presidency, along with the reduction of hunger, the promotion
of sustainable development and reforms of global governance.
A global minimum tax on billionaires is
one way of raising funds to make progress on those agendas, Felipe Antunes de
Oliveira with Brazil’s Finance Ministry told journalists.
The gap between the super-rich and the
bulk of the global population has grown since the coronavirus pandemic,
according to anti-poverty organization Oxfam International, which praised the
new report.
"This is a sensible and serious
proposal that is in every government’s strategic economic interest,"
interim executive director Amitabh Behar said in a statement.
According to a 2023
study by advocacy group Tax Justice Network, countries around the world could
lose up to $4.8 trillion in tax revenue over the next decade due to the use of
tax havens by individuals and businesses.