Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The 5 biggest problems with Oxfam’s 2018 income inequality report
The 5 biggest problems with Oxfam’s 2018 income inequality report
Oct 30, 2025 2:39 PM

Oxfam has just released its annualreport, and the media have dutifully covered its conclusion that “82% of all growth in global wealth in the last year went to the top 1%, while the bottom half of humanity saw no increase at all.” Here are five significant concerns every Christian should have with it:

Inequality is not the same as poverty

The report admits, “Between 1990 and 2010, the number of people living in extreme poverty (i.e. on less than $1.90 a day) halved, and has continued to decline since then.” That decline has caused Oxfam to focus instead on economic inequality.

“The poverty industry has successfully reoriented the storyline from the relief of poverty to the reduction of inequality,” said Rev. Richard Turnbull of the Centre of Enterprise, Markets, and Ethics (CEME), at Acton’s “Reclaiming the West” conference last December 6. “The churches have entirely bought in to this narrative. … It is remarkable that so many evangelicals fell for” it. Measuring the wrong metric leads to unusual es, such as….

Donald Trump: Oxfam pauper?

Today’s report chides President Donald Trump for appointing “a cabinet of billionaires,” presumably like Betsy DeVos. Yet many of the people cheering its release may be surprised to learn that, under Oxfam’s formula, The Donald may have qualified as one of the downtrodden.

Oxfam evaluates “the wealthy” by subtracting a person’s net liabilities from net assets. Thus, a lawyer with substantial student loans who was just hired by a prestigious Wall Street firm is considered “poor.” Fortune magazine surveyed Donald Trump’s least successful years and asked, “Wouldn’t it be remarkable if the tycoon, who was claiming even in his darkest days in the 1990s to be worth over $1 billion … was really not just dead broke, but hugely under water?” If he were in debt, Trump would be among Oxfam’s poorest, worse off than someone earning two dollars a day with no net liabilities.

End extreme wealth

The report states, “To end extreme poverty, we must also end extreme wealth.” This is rather like advising, “To end extreme disease, we must also end extreme health.” The section reads in full:

End extreme wealth. To end extreme poverty, we must also end extreme wealth. Today’s gilded age is undermining our future. Governments should use regulation and taxation to radically reduce levels of extreme wealth, as well as limit the influence of wealthy individuals and groups over policy making.

The recent period of tremendous wealth generation coincides with the unprecedented fall in extreme poverty. Global GDP per capita has more than doubled since 1994. Despite coinciding with a rise in “inequality,” rates of global happiness enjoyed an unbroken rise since 1995, according to the World Values Survey.

Far from a pox, Rev. Turnbull said that “wealth creation, for the Christian, is actually a spiritual imperative,” part of the “creation mandate.” God created mankind in His image, endowed us with unmatched rational faculties, provided ample natural resources, manded us to get to work adding value. “We would do well to honor, rather than disparage, those who create wealth and take entrepreneurial risk,” he said.

Minimum wages maximize unemployment

The report advises every nation to adopt a “living wage” in the same section that laments youth unemployment:

Almost 43% of the global youth labour force is still either unemployed, or working but living in poverty. … Sadly, many countries still have no minimum wage or collective bargaining and most minimum wages are significantly lower than what is needed to survive or what could be described as a living wage.

A growing body of data demonstrates that higher minimum wages increase joblessness among the less educated, young people, minorities, and those living in the most economically munities. A UK think tank found that its rising National Living Wage will shed countless new low-wage jobs through increased automation. In the U.S., minimum wage laws increased unemployment among high school dropouts aged 16 to 30 by 5.6 percent. California’s $15-an-hour minimum wage will cost an estimated 400,000 jobs, according to theEmployment Policy Institute (EPI). And Canada’s Fraser InstitutefoundthatOntario’s $15 minimum wage would have the most “severe effects” on people who already live in“economically weaker regions.”

The myth of omniscient government

Oxfam bases its calculations on data from Forbes and theCredit Suisse Global Wealth databook. Last year’s report confidently asserted that “eight men own the same wealth as the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity.” This year’s report quietly notes that its estimate changed from eight people to 61.

A revision of 763 percent is no small inaccuracy.

Despite its own mistake, Oxfam expects every government to accurately calculate and enforce a single “living wage” appropriate to all its citizens. Every corporation must undertake the same task for every single employee, as well as every worker in every segment of its global supply chain. If such micro-measuring is beyond petence, perhaps it is beyond petence (not to mention the purpose) of any corporation – let alone every corporation.

Creating absolute economic equality is also beyond Oxfam’s ability. No two people have the same circumstances, skill-set, and opportunities as one another – nor to themselves at different points in their own lives. The average person will see a much different economic picture at 22 years old graduating from college as a 65-year-old about to retire at the end of peak-earning years. This diversity brings glory to God in a multitude of unique ways.

Instead of lamenting wealth inequality – and the wealth creation that decimated global extreme want – people of faith should focus on alleviating true poverty, expanding economic opportunity, and carrying out the creation mandate to improve the world God has temporarily entrusted to us.

Ken. CC BY-SA 4.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Don’t Politicize Transgender Issue
I want to be very clear from the outset that moral concerns surrounding transgender identity are not unimportant. But in the likely event that we e to any national consensus on that question any time soon, it is important not to overlook other moral and social concerns that are far more pressing. In particular, there are legitimate concerns regarding safety and privacy, no matter which side one favors, but resorting to the force of law will leave some real victims...
Explainer: Puerto Rico’s Financial Crisis
The monwealth of Puerto Rico is struggling under a massive $72 billion debt and a decade-long economic recession. Here is what you should know about the ongoing financial crisis: How did the debt crisis happen? During the Spanish-American War in the late 1890s the U.S. military invaded the Spanish-owned island of Puerto Rico. After the war ended, the U.S. retained control, making the islands an unincorporated territory and the residents U.S. citizens. In 1917, Congress passed the Puerto Rican Federal...
Explainer: Supreme Court Punts on Little Sisters Religious Liberty Case
What just happened? The Supreme Court avoided issuing a major ruling today in bined religious liberty case, Zubik v. Burwell. In a unanimous decision, the justices wrote that the Court “expresses no view on the merits of the cases” but were instead sending the case back down to the lower courts for opposing parties to work out promise. What is this case, and what’s it about? The case, Zubik v. bines seven challenges to the Health and Human Services’ (HHS)...
Sisters’ ExxonMobil Resolution More Gaia Than Catholic
Divination, bearing false witness and pantheism are three no-no’s of Christianity. You could look it up. I know from personal experience that many of my fellow pewsitters in the Catholic tradition fail in their attempts to obey the strictures of the faith by seeking out tarot cards, Ouija boards, horoscopes and the like. Many of us are guilty also of spreading deceit, bald-faced lies or even plete and unsettled facts as ontological truths. This has been a problem for some...
The Power—and Danger—in Luther’s Concept of Work
“MartinLuther probably did more than any Protestant to establish thetheology of work many Christians embrace today,” says Dan Doriani. “Like no theologian before him, he insisted on the dignity and value of all labor.” Doriani highlights many of Luther’s positive contributions to the theology of work, but warnsthat it can lead to confusing “work” and “vocation”: There is occupation without vocation. One can earn bread as a cashier, cook, nanny, or salesperson without hearing a call to that life. A...
4 Theories About the Business Cycle
Expansion. Contraction. Repeat. For almost 200 years, we’ve recognized this boom-and-bust pattern as the business cycle, the downward and upward movement of gross domestic product (GDP) around its long-term growth trend. But while we all know what it is, we don’t always agree on what causes the business cycle. In the following series of four videos, economist Tyler Cowen briefly explains four different theories —Austrian Theory, Keynesian Theory, Monetarist Theory, and Real Business Cycle Theory —and highlights some of the...
Audio: Samuel Gregg on God, Profit, and the Common Good
Acton Institute Director of Research Samuel Gregg joined host John Harper on Relevant Radio’sMorning Air on Friday morning to discuss his latest book,For God and Profit: How Banking and Finance Can Serve the Common Good.Banking and finance are vitally important institutions in a free and prosperous society, and ordered properly contribute a great deal to mon good. The real question of the day is whether or not our banking and finance systems are properly ordered, and if they have gotten...
ICCR’s Rules for Radical Nuns
What is it with nuns crusading against corporate lobbying? This fad of recent years has grabbed headlines as orders such as the Sisters of Mercy and the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia gravitated toward political actions as members of shareholder activist group the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. Seems there’s nothing alternately cuter pelling than a nun “speaking truth” to corporate power as the ICCR nuns do each year in their campaign against lobbying and donations to nonprofit organizations such as...
The Regulatory State Adds ‘Ten Thousand Commandments’ Every Year
In the Old Testament there mandments. Apparently,God deemed those to be enough to regulate almost every aspect of the lives of his people for thousands of years. You could read all of them in less than 30 minutes. The American federal government, however, is not so succinct. There are over 1 million restrictions in the federal regulations alone (i.e., not counting the statutory law). And thousands more are added every year. Each year the Competitive Enterprise Institute puts out annual...
Video: Michael Matheson Miller Critiques Celebrity Poverty Campaigns
Acton Institute Research Fellow and Director of Poverty, Inc. Michael Matheson Miller made an appearance on Fox Business Channel last week to discuss how his documentary addresses the issue of celebrity efforts at poverty alleviation, noting that often, such campaigns can do more harm than good. You can watch the interview below. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved