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Contact information:

Simon Trépanier in Italy DC | simon.trepanier@oxfam.org | +39 388 850 9970

Annie Thériault in Washington DC | annie.theriault@oxfam.org | +51 936 307 990

For updates, please follow @NewsFromOxfam and @Oxfam

Notes to editors:

Download Oxfam’s methodology note and dataset.

May Day, celebrated by workers across the globe as International Workers’ Day, falls on May 1.

Download Oxfam’s report “Survival of the Richest” for more information about taxing the super-rich to fight inequality. Oxfam recommends introducing top rates of tax (marginal rates) of at least 75 percent on all personal income for the highest earners (e.g., for those making $5 million a year, or the top 0.1%) to discourage sky-high executive pay.

According to Oxfam America’s report "The crisis of low wages in the US”, nearly a third of all workers in the US earn under $15 an hour.

The Janus Henderson Global Dividend Index publishes data on annual dividends by country.

According to the United Nations University, the top 1 percent of South Africans own 95 percent of bonds and corporate shares, while the richest 0.01 percent own 62.7 percent. The US Federal Reserve publishes data on corporate equities and mutual fund shares by wealth percentile group.

Oxfam’s research shows that taxes on incomes from dividends and shares have fallen from 61 percent in 1980 to 42 percent.