Content sections
Contact information:

Jorge Cordeiro in Brazil | jorge.cordeiro@oxfam.org.brmailto:| +55 11 984 590 142

Annie Thériault in Peru | annie.theriault@oxfam.org | +51 936 307 990

Belinda Torres Leclercq | belinda.torres-leclercq@oxfam.org | +32 (0) 472 55 34 43

For updates, please follow @NewsFromOxfam and @OxfamBrasil

Notes to editors:

According to the World Bank, China’s GDP is $17.96 trillion. 

Members of the G20 collect on average just 7.6 percent of their tax revenue through taxes on wealth (excluding India, Russia and Saudi Arabia, for which data is not available). Wealth taxes include property tax, inheritance tax, recurrent and non-recurrent net wealth taxes and all other forms of wealth taxes. On average, these G20 countries collect 32.3 percent of their tax revenue through taxes on goods and services (4.24 times as much), including VAT, GST and other indirect taxes. Data is from the OECD’s Global Revenue Statistics Database.

The richest 1 percent of people in G20 countries (excluding the European Union and the African Union) earned 16 percent of pre-tax national income in 2022, compared to 11 percent in 1980. This is an increase of 45 percent. Data is from the World Inequality Database

The top marginal tax rate on personal income in 1980 was 59.5 percent on average across 17 G20 countries (there is no personal income tax in Saudi Arabia, and Russia was excluded due to data limitations). In 2022, the average top tax rate had fallen to 40.4 percent in the same 17 countries, equivalent to a 32.1 percent drop.

Studies in Brazil, France, Italy, the UK and US have shown that the super-rich pay a lower effective tax rate than the average worker. 

Nearly three-quarters of millionaires polled in G20 countries support higher taxes on wealth, and over half think extreme wealth is a “threat to democracy.” 72 percent think that extreme wealth helps buy political influence. 

Polling consistently finds that most people across countries support raising taxes on the richest. For example, the majority of people in the US, 80 percent of Indians, 85 percent of Brazilians and 69 percent of people polled across 34 countries in Africa support increasing taxes on the rich.

In January 2024, 260 millionaires and billionaires signed a letter demanding world leaders increase their taxes. In September 2023, nearly 300 economists, millionaires, and politicians, including 18 former heads of state, called on the G20 to tax extreme wealth.

During the World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings in Marrakech last year, Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad discussed Brazil’s plans to make progress on taxing the richest during its G20 presidency.

Current estimates suggest that donor governments need to invest around $37 billion every year until 2030 to tackle both extreme and chronic hunger.

According to UNEP’s “Adaptation Gap Report 2023”, the adaptation finance needed to implement domestic adaptation priorities in low- and middle-income countries is estimated at $387 billion per year.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently called on the G20 to agree a $500 billion annual stimulus to help meet the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.