Key facts
- Billionaire wealth has reached a record $20.1 trillion, a 40% increase in two years.
- The wealth surge is largely driven by the boom in artificial intelligence and major tech companies.
- Billionaire wealth has increased by 81% since 2020, outpacing global poverty reduction.
- Elon Musk is on track to become the first trillionaire.
- Billionaires are significantly more likely to hold political office and influence policy.
- The rise in wealth coincides with increased food insecurity and poverty globally.
Billionaire wealth has surged to a record $20.1 trillion, with a 40% increase in the last two years, driven significantly by the boom in artificial intelligence and major technology companies. This rapid accumulation of wealth at the top is occurring while global poverty and food insecurity remain widespread.
According to a new Oxfam report, billionaire wealth jumped by over 16% in 2025, three times faster than the average over the past five years, reaching its highest level in history. Since 2020, billionaire wealth has increased by 81%, a stark contrast to the stagnation in poverty reduction, with extreme poverty rising again in Africa. The report highlights that the collective wealth of billionaires last year surged by $2.5 trillion, an amount nearly equivalent to the total wealth held by the bottom half of humanity. The number of billionaires topped 3,000 for the first time, and Elon Musk became the first person to surpass half a trillion dollars in wealth.
French economist Gabriel Zucman calculated that the combined wealth of billionaires has more than tripled from $4.5 trillion fifteen years ago to $14.2 trillion by 2024. This growth is particularly prominent in the United States, where roughly one-third of the world's nearly 3,000 billionaires reside. The rise in wealth has coincided with significant changes to U.S. tax laws over the last decade that have largely benefited the country's richest families and stockholders, increasing their political influence. The boom in artificial intelligence has funneled trillions of dollars into a small clutch of tech companies, with their founders and early investors reaping most of the financial gains. Elon Musk is poised to become an instant trillionaire with the anticipated initial public offering of his company, SpaceX.
Oxfam's report also emphasizes the link between extreme wealth concentration and political power, stating that billionaires are 4,000 times more likely to hold political office than ordinary people. This influence is used to shape economic and social rules for their own benefit, often to the detriment of global freedoms and rights. The organization estimates that the $2.5 trillion rise in billionaires' wealth would be enough to eradicate extreme poverty 26 times over. Oxfam International Executive Director Amitabh Behar noted that governments are making choices that pander to the elite, defending wealth while repressing people's rights and contributing to the unaffordability of life for many.