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Pandemic Profiteers – When Billionaires Got Richer, A Lot Richer

Elon Musk

Photo illustration by Jonathan Raa_NurPhoto (Shutterstock)

While you and me were counting our pennies, Bezos & Musk were raking it in

Liberty Project Staff
Liberty Project Staff

Apr 03 | 2024

“Behind every great fortune lies a great crime” … French novelist Honoré de Balzac

No one disputes the fact that the global pandemic threw us all under the bus. Some of us got sick. Some of us lost loved ones. Others lost jobs. Others reaped the benefits. At Inequality.org, journalist Chuck Collins recently shared some statistics concerning the ever-increasing disparity between billionaires and average folks. In a nutshell, the rich not only got richer – they got a lot richer.

Pandemic profiteers like Musk and Bezos made out like bandits and the figures are jaw-dropping. At the start of the pandemic, Tesla CEO Elon Musk was worth about $25 billion dollars; two years into the pandemic his wealth had surged to $255 billion. When last checked – March 18, 2024 – Musk is at $188.5 billion. That’s more than a seven-fold increase in four years.

At the same time, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ wealth has soared from $113 billion to 192.8 billion – even after donating tens of billions to charity and paying out tens of billions more in a divorce settlement with his now ex-wife, MacKenzie Scott.

Speaking of Ms. Scott, she’s the only billionaire on the 2020 top 15 wealthiest Americans list to see a decline in her wealth decline from a net worth of $36 billion in 2020 to $35.4 billion due to her generous giving to charity. At least someone has their values in check.

In 2022 the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics summed up one study of COVID’s impact on those of us who were just trying to keep our heads above the water line:

The pandemic disrupted lower-paid, service-sector employment

most, disadvantaging women and lower income groups at least

temporarily, and this may have scarring effects…Higher-paid

workers tend to gain more from continuing opportunities to

telework. Less-advantaged students suffered greater educational

setbacks from school closures. School and daycare closures

disrupted the work of many parents, particularly mothers. We

conclude that the pandemic is likely to widen income inequality

over the long run, because the lasting changes in work patterns,

consumer demand, and production will benefit higher income

groups and erode opportunities for some less advantaged groups.

The U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics got it right. Income inequality grew like cancer cells in the course of the pandemic. Collins’ data tells us that in March 2020 the U. S. harbored 614 billionaires worth $2.947 trillion. In March 2024 the number of billionaires had grown to 737 billionaires worth $5.529 trillion.

If not always illegal, this vast increase in billionaires’ wealth has deadly consequences.

In 2022 Oxfam International published Inequality Kills, a report detailing how inequality “is contributing to the death of at least 21,000 people each day, or one person every four seconds. This is a conservative finding based on deaths globally from lack of access to healthcare, gender-based violence, hunger, and climate breakdown.”

Oxfam’s International Executive Director Gabriela Bucher made it quite clear just what led to that perilous state of affairs:

Central banks pumped trillions of dollars into financial markets

to save the economy, yet much of that has ended up lining the

pockets of billionaires riding a stock market boom. Vaccines

were meant to end this pandemic, yet rich governments allowed

pharma billionaires and monopolies to cut off the supply to

billions of people. The result is that every kind of inequality

imaginable risks rising. The predictability of it is sickening.

Fixing – or at least ameliorating – inequality is no easy task. The recommendations of the Peterson Institute for International Economics include: governments need to address inequality directly and specifically; taxes and spending programs must be progressive and benefit others than the wealthy; novel approaches must replace tired, by-the-book policy.

Whatever remedies one favors to deal with the obscene inequality of wealth here and elsewhere, the time to act is now. As Oxfam’s Bucher says: “The consequences of it kill.”

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