SAFTU angered by shelving of wealth tax
The South African Federation of Trade Unions is deeply disappointed that the Davis Tax Committee has concluded that South Africa is “not ready” for a wealth tax in the foreseeable future.
The committee said this despite recognizing the “disturbing levels of wealth inequality” in the country. It repeated statistics which SAFTU has often quoted - that “the wealthiest 10% of the population owns more than 90% of the wealth”.
An editorial in the pro-wealthy Business Day produced even more dramatic evidence of this level of inequality:
“Among the 149 countries that the World Bank ranks for relative inequality, SA is the highest, followed closely by neighbours Namibia and Botswana. When wealth inequality is measured, the picture is even more unequal and SA has a Gini coefficient of 0.9 — higher than global inequality overall.”
It even quotes French economist Thomas Piketty, who showed that it is wealth rather than income that has been identified as the bigger culprit in fuelling inequality and says that “In SA, this is overlaid with a history of racially based wealth accumulation. Not only do rich people stay rich because they inherit wealth, but white people, in general, stay rich, while black people, in general, stay poor”.