HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesBillionaires ain’t getting no love

Billionaires ain’t getting no love

The way things are going, they’ll soon take the blame for global warming or for the inequitable distribution of vaccines...

May 22, 2022 / 06:49 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
In the process of becoming wealthy, really wealthy, how have the super rich made themselves so unpopular? (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
In the process of becoming wealthy, really wealthy, how have the super rich made themselves so unpopular? (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Being a billionaire isn’t much fun any more. They just aren’t getting the love they believe they deserve. The elite club of barely 3,000 across the world is hurting. They got the stick for exploiting the pandemic to grow their wealth and also for not doing enough to alleviate the misery of those less fortunate. They are also being regularly beaten up for not paying enough taxes and also for fostering crony capitalism.

The way things are going, they’ll soon cop the blame for global warming or for the inequitable distribution of vaccines that’s left people in many low-income countries unprotected from the deadly virus. Oh wait, they are already being held responsible for that!

Story continues below Advertisement

One billionaire in particular has seen his reputation shred to bits over the course of the last two years, even as his personal life has been in strife. William Henry Gates III has been in the eye of the storm ever since he opposed the sharing of intellectual property rights for making Covid-19 vaccines with developing countries. For this he was branded “vaccine racist” and much worse. Given the billions of dollars in profits that pharma companies like Pfizer and Moderna have made from their vaccines, even as many of the poorer countries struggle to pay for them, it is difficult to understand why a man who never stops reminding us how he is a global philanthropist should choose to side with the medicine monopolies.

Gates did appear to have changed his mind when the CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced last year that the foundation was supportive of temporarily lifting coronavirus vaccine patent protections. But the reprieve, if any, was temporary.