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Data on billionaire wealth data is from Forbes’ Real-Time Billionaire List. Between 31 July 2024 and 31 January 2025, billionaire wealth increased by $1.1 trillion (from $14.4 trillion to $15.5 trillion). In January 2025, their wealth rose by $314 billion (from $15.199 trillion to $15.513 trillion).  

Data on the wealth of the bottom third of the humanity and the average global income are from the World Inequality Database. The total wealth of the poorest 35 percent of the global population is $241.5 billion. The average global annual income per adult is $20,872. To earn $314 billion, 15,044,123 workers would need to work for an entire year.  

In July 2024, the Rio de Janeiro G20 Ministerial Declaration on International Tax Cooperation was published. In November 2024, G20 leaders agreed to cooperate on taxing the world’s super-rich.  

In February, Pope Francis, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, former South African President Thabo Mbeki, former Senegalese Prime Minister Aminata Touré, as well as economists Joseph Stiglitz, Jayati Ghosh and Gabriel Zucman delivered a powerful and unequivocal message: the global oligarchy must be challenged through fair taxation of the super-rich

More than 370 millionaires and billionaires, spanning 22 countries, including Abigail Disney, Marlene Engelhorn, Brian Eno, and Richard Curtis signed an open letter demanding world leaders “draw the line” and tax the super-rich. A recent poll of 2,902 millionaires from G20 countries found that 70 percent think that taxes should be raised on the super-rich to help reduce the current levels of inequality and invest in public services. 

The #TaxTheSuperRich Movement is powered by a diverse network of organizations from across the world, united by a shared commitment: to create a fairer and greener world by taxing the super-rich.