The Real Goldfinger: The London Banker Who Broke the World

The Real Goldfinger: The London Banker Who Broke the World

[Screen Capture: The Guardian. Photograph: Guardian Design Team]

[Screen Capture: The Guardian. Photograph: Guardian Design Team]

The true story of how the City of London invented offshore banking – and set the rich free

Every January, to coincide with the World Economic Forum in Davos, Oxfam tells us how much richer the world’s richest people have got. In 2016, their report showed that the wealthiest 62 individuals owned the same amount as the bottom half of the world’s population. This year, that number had dropped to 42: three-and-half-dozen people with as much stuff as three-and-a-half billion.

This yearly ritual has become part of the news cycle, and the inequality it exposes has ceased to shock us. The very rich getting very much richer is now part of life, like the procession of the seasons. But we should be extremely concerned: their increased wealth gives them ever-greater control of our politics and of our media. Countries that were once democracies are becoming plutocracies; plutocracies are becoming oligarchies; oligarchies are becoming kleptocracies.

Things were not always this way. In the years after the second world war, the trend was in the opposite direction: the poor were getting richer; we were all getting more equal. To understand how and why that changed, we need to go back to the dying days of the conflict, to a resort in New Hampshire, where a group of economists set out to secure humanity’s future.

This is the story of how their dream failed and how a London banker’s bright idea broke the world.

Oliver Bullough, writing at The Guardian, looks at the impact that offshore banking has had on world economics. Read his exceptional reporting HERE.

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