Practice Strategies
Preview - "Inequality Emergency" Webinar

Wealth inequality - and other types of inequality - remain hot political issues, given a further edge by the pandemic and the very different impact on people across the world. This webinar, held on June 17, addresses what is to be done and why this matters for the wealth management industry.
Senior figures from the world of banking, finance, philanthropy
and policy advocacy address whether the world faces an
“inequality emergency” and what to do about it. They gather for a
webinar held on June 17. (To register,
click here.)
The COVID-19 lockdowns have boosted the fortunes of some
businesses – such as those linked to digital tech - but have also
hurt other business owners, workers and families around the
world. The sharply contrasting impact of the crisis adds to
forces such as rapid technological change and the huge central
bank money printing since the 2008 financial crack-up.
Pensavvi, an
international network of private investors, is putting on a
webinar that aims to debate these issues. The webinar is being
supported by Family Wealth Report, Highworth
Research and Refinitiv.
If inequality – on the assumption that it is as severe as claimed
– is not addressed, then the political and social fallout will
hit all segments of society, including high net worth families,
critics argue. (An important area of potential dispute is whether
the issue is inequality of outcomes or inequality of
opportunity.)
“We have no choice but to end up where we are now, such as with
economic, social and political unrest,” Erica Payne, founder of
the Patriotic
Millionaires organization – which campaigns for higher taxes
on the wealthy – told FWR in a call. She is one of the
speakers at the webinar.
Joining Payne is Nick Hanauer, a billionaire businessman who was
the first non-family angel investor in Amazon.com and who sold
one of the businesses he founded to Microsoft. Also speaking at
the webinar is Dr Danny Sriskandarajah, CEO of Oxfam GB, and Federico
Ceresole, who leads the portfolio advisory group in EMEA for
Goldman Sachs PWM, part of Goldman
Sachs.
The webinar is hosted by Rob Cox, global editor and co-founder of
Reuters BreakingViews.
Payne spoke to FWR shortly after the G7 nations agreed a
global minimum
corporate tax rate of 15 per cent, and as Washington DC
debates US President Joe Biden’s proposed tax increases on HNW US
citizens to help fund his multi-trillion spending programs.
A public policy commentator, author and strategist, Payne’s
organization, The Patriotic Millionaires, represents US HNW
citizens who say they worry about the malign impact of
concentrated wealth and power in the country.
Payne told FWR that worries about wealth and
political inequality aren’t confined to one side of the political
aisle. “We work on issues that are wildly popular on a
bi-partisan political basis,” she said. “Our specific goal is to
reform our country’s political economy, so that it produces
results for a stable, inclusive and prosperous society.”
While it is true that the richest US citizens pay a
disproportionately high level of federal income tax, the tax
burdens they pay in terms of the amount of money they need to
live on, are much smaller relative to those on lower incomes,
Payne said.
The complexity of the US tax code is a big issue, she said: “We
created complexity to benefit the wealthiest people in the
country.”