There is enough money. Enough to fix our crumbling public services. Enough to support the most vulnerable people in our society. The trouble is, it has been concentrated in the hands of a few for too long.
Last weekend, the Sunday Times Rich List once again laid bare this reality: in 2025, the UK’s 350 wealthiest individuals now hold a staggering £772.8 billion. It’s also impossible to ignore that some of these individuals have made money in industries that profit from social harm or public need – from property empires and asylum hotels, to gambling and the extraction of fossil fuels. These are not sectors creating shared prosperity. In fact, many have been built on the back of public goods that have been steadily privatised. We have ended up with an economy in which we pay more and get less, in which our hard-earned money flows upwards and concentrates at the top.
Meanwhile, disabled people face brutal cuts to benefits, a lifeline for most. Pensioners are losing their winter fuel allowance. Families struggling in poverty are still punished by the two-child benefit cap. Bills are going up, far above wages rising. The housing crisis deepens, pushing many out of their local communities. Food banks continue to grow in their numbers. Yet we are constantly told that we’ve “maxed out the credit card”.
This isn’t true. We have wealth in this country, we just don’t have a fair system to redistribute it.
Read more:
- Save tens of billions in public money by ending hunger – not slashing benefits, government told
- World will soon see first trillionaires as wealth of billionaires yet again on the rise: ‘Obscene’
- UK’s tax system lets the wealthy off the hook, report finds – and traps Northerners in inequality
A tax system which allows the super-rich to grow their wealth while the vast majority is getting poorer is fundamentally regressive. The number of billionaires in the UK has grown significantly – from 15 in 1990 to 165 in 2024. At the same time, inequality in the UK’s overall wealth distribution has dramatically increased, according to the Equality Trust, with 50 richest families holding more wealth than 50% of the population. We need a tax system that closes loopholes, taxes wealth at the same rate as income and guarantees that wealthy individuals and corporations pay their fair share of tax.