Just imagine during the early months of the pandemic, when local businesses across the country closed and millions of hungry Americans turned to food banks for the first time, over a period of seven-month America’s 614 billionaires grew their net worth by a collective $931 billion. And today, according to a Washington Post report the wealthiest 1 percent of American households own 40 percent of the country’s wealth and the bottom 90 percent of families holding less than one-quarter of all wealth. This share is higher than it has been at any point since at least 1962.
Before I go any further, I want to share a short
passage from a book that I recently received. The book entitled “For the
Well-Being of All: Eliminating the Extremes of Wealth and Poverty” was published by
the Bahá’à Publishing Trust of USA. One page 9, it says, “The inordinate
disparity between rich and poor, a source of acute suffering, keeps the
world in a state of instability, virtually on the brink of war. Few societies
have dealt effectively with this situation. The solution calls for the combined
application of spiritual, moral and practical approaches. A fresh look at the
problem is required, entailing consultation with experts from a wide spectrum
of disciplines, devoid of economic and ideological polemics, and involving the
people directly affected in the decisions that must urgently be made. It is an
issue that is bound up not only with the necessity for eliminating extremes of
wealth and poverty but also with those spiritual verities the understanding
of which can produce a new universal attitude. Fostering such an attitude is
itself a major part of the solution. (The
Universal House of Justice, The Promise
of World Peace, ¶30)
This is mainly because in high-inequality countries, people from poor households typically have less access to quality education. There is no tax plan to reduce the extreme inequality in the United States to find ways to redistribute some of the wealth from the richest households to the poorest ones. African American families and minorities in general have a fraction of the wealth of white families, leaving them more economically insecure and with far fewer opportunities for economic mobility. Also, persistent labor market discrimination, segregation, racial profiling by the authorities force blacks into fewer and less advantageous employment opportunities than their white counterparts. This leads to “large amounts of wasted potential and lower social mobility,” which directly harms economic growth, according to a report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
But, inequality is also playing out on a global scale. Global inequality is shocking and vast number of billionaires has doubled in the last decade. According to the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report, the world's richest 1 percent, those with more than $1 million, own 44 percent of the world's wealth. Their data also shows that adults with less than $10,000 in wealth make up 56.6 percent of the world's population but hold less than 2 percent of global wealth.
I
was listening to NPR very recently. According to the news, The World Bank group
recently reported that global extreme poverty is expected to rise for the first
time in over 20 years as the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic intensifies
the forces of conflict and climate change around the globe. The pandemic has
even exacerbated existing inequalities in poorer countries. It is estimated
that pandemic to push an additional 88 million to 115 million people into
extreme poverty this year, with the total rising to as many as 150 million by
2021.
Even
in the United States, black people—whose household wealth is a 10th that of
their white counterparts—are dying at more than double the rate of white
Americans. In England, the COVID-19 death rate was more than twice as in
the poorest parts of the country than in its wealthiest areas.
During my visit to Haiti, I met these children in a village school. The parents of these children earn an average of $1.90 a day - as HH income |
Debbie is with the grand daughter. Sitting beside her is the girl's mother. Running water and social distancing are luxuries. |
My daughter Natascha is seen among small children in a Massai Tribal village in Kenya, Africa. They all sit inside this small mud hut, sit close to each other for daily classes. |
Debbie and I visited a Muslim refugee camp in the Eastern part of Sri Lanka. Again, running water and washing hands are luxuries at these camps |
During my visit to the Philippines, I visited this slum in Manila. |
I took this picture in a village in Haiti. Women are gathered to get their daily water supply
Having visited slums and villages in several countries, I am worried about the deadly effects this pandemic will bring to those people. Social distancing is virtually impossible in refugee camps or slums. For them, it is a luxury of space that they do not have. Washing hands is virtually impossible in camps if you have no running water. At least, we are so blessed and afford extensive deliveries of food and other staples, and to carry out much of our jobs through telework. This has shown us the luxury we live in the abundance of products, freedom and health and realizing we were taking it for granted.Recent reports clearly indicates that as wealthier countries
cautiously reopen their economies after having slowed their rates of infection,
countries in the developing world in Asia and Africa are recording
progressively higher numbers of new daily cases.
The gap between rich and poor
can’t be resolved without satisfactory solution to eradicate poverty. And it
lies in a profound change of heart and mind which only religion can produce.
The human and material resources at our disposal must be used for the long-term
good of all, not for the short-term advantage of a few.
“There must be special laws made,
dealing with these extremes of riches and of want. The members of the
Government should consider the laws of God when they are framing plans for the
ruling of the people. The general rights of mankind must be guarded and
preserved” (Abdul Baha, Paris Talks.
P 153)
(Source: Center for American Progress, The Washington Post, OECD)
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