The Oxfam report today came ahead of the annual World Economic Forum meeting in Davos.
The international agency, whose executive director Winnie Byanyima will co-chair the Davos event, said the explosion in inequality is holding back the fight against global poverty at a time when 1 in 9 people do not have enough to eat and more than a billion people still live on less than USD 1.25 a day.
According to the report by worldwide development organisation Oxfam, in 2014, 85 rich individuals held more wealth than the poorest half of the world's population -- 3.5 billion people.
"If this trend continues of an increasing wealth share to the richest, the top 1 per cent will have more wealth than the remaining 99 per cent of people in just two years," Oxfam said in a report.
In 2010, the richest 80 people in the world had a net wealth of USD 1.3 trillion. By 2014, the 80 people who top the Forbes rich list had a collective wealth of USD 1.9 trillion; an increase of USD 600 billion in just 4 years.
The wealth of these 80 individuals is now the same as that owned by the bottom 50 per cent of the global population, such that 3.5 billion people share between them the same amount of wealth as that of these extremely wealthy 80 people, the report said.
"The scale of global inequality is quite simply staggering and despite the issues shooting up the global agenda, the gap between the richest and the rest is widening fast," Byanyima said, adding that it is time our leaders took on the powerful vested interests that stand in the way of a fairer and more prosperous world.
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