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A world out of balance: Forbes lists 3,428 billionaires as 700 million struggle

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak* 
Amidst the cascading crises defining our era, Forbes magazine recently marked its 40th annual World’s Billionaires List with its customary fanfare. The 2026 edition, however, is more than just a ritualistic celebration of wealth. It is a stark, damning document of our time, revealing not only a continuing billionaire boom but the deep and dangerous fault lines of global inequality it both creates and conceals. It exposes a world where the fortunes of a few and the struggles of the many are two sides of the same capitalist coin.
The statistics are staggering. The list identifies 3,428 billionaires whose combined net wealth has exploded from $1 trillion in 2000 to $20.1 trillion today. In the past year alone, their collective fortunes swelled by an astonishing $4 trillion, with a record 400 new members joining the club—more than one new billionaire per day. Meanwhile, millions of ordinary people have lost their jobs and livelihoods. The scale of this concentration is obscene: 20 individuals now belong to the exclusive "$100 Billion Club," hoarding $3.8 trillion between them, while 700 million people globally are forced to survive on less than $2.15 a day.
This chasm is not a natural phenomenon, nor is it a simple reflection of merit. These billionaires are not merely products of superior talent or hard work, just as the 700 million people in poverty are not suffering from a lack of it. The truth is far more systemic. The concentration of wealth is a direct outcome of the marketisation of politics, where the labour of the masses generates unprecedented profits for a select few. States and governments, increasingly beholden to corporate interests, craft the very policies that facilitate this wealth hoarding. They perpetuate poverty and inequality by enshrining exploitative working conditions as the norm, creating a political economy where capitalist development is synonymous with social regression. These corporate-driven states are the primary architects of the billionaire class, a class that then uses its immense resources—funding election campaigns, owning media outlets, and flooding the public sphere with propaganda—to further capture the state and ensure policy continues to serve its interests at the expense of the people.
The geographical concentration of this wealth is equally telling. Of the 3,428 billionaires, over half—1,757—are from just three countries: the United States (989), China (539), and India (229). American billionaires alone hold a staggering $8.4 trillion of the global total. These nations, celebrated as economic powerhouses, face enormous internal challenges from this widening inequality. In India, for instance, the ten richest billionaires now own over $1 trillion, a sum that looms large against the country's $4.51 trillion GDP. This is not merely a statistic; it is a reflection of a state seemingly aligned with the billionaire class, leaving working people to bear the brunt of a deepening cost-of-living crisis.
The profit-making machine never falters for these individuals, because the state stands firmly behind it. Yet, it is working people who generate all real wealth. They produce the goods, provide the services, harvest the food, and build the schools, hospitals, and infrastructure that sustain society. In a grotesque paradox, those who build and maintain the world are often the ones suffering from hunger, homelessness, and a lack of access to the very facilities they create. This is not an accident; it is a design feature of a capitalist system that has effectively colonised the state. In this process, democracy is being hollowed out, transformed into a billionaire oligarchy, and society is reduced to an orderly marketplace where profit over people is not just an outcome, but the foundational rule.
Ultimately, the Forbes list is more than a tally of fortunes. It is a political document that lays bare the machinery of exploitation. It shows that the privilege of 3,428 individuals in a world of 8.3 billion is not a blessing from the gods, but a product of policies designed and defended by states across the globe. These billionaires are not merely wealthy individuals; they are the primary shareholders and powerful enforcers of a global capitalist system. They form a class network without borders, fuelling reactionary politics and imperialist agendas that further impoverish the masses, erode citizenship rights, and dismantle economic justice. Inequality and exploitation are not bugs in this system; they are its lifeblood.
Therefore, the Forbes list is a call to action. The struggle against the capitalist system itself remains central to building a just world. Only by dismantling the structures that enable this grotesque concentration of wealth can we hope to build an egalitarian society grounded in genuine fairness and justice for all.
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*Academic based in UK 

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