The G7 leaders have to rein in policies that are driving inequality and poverty at home and abroad, says Oxfam, if Johnson, Macron, Trump, Trudeau and co. can all get along in Biarritz.
Last year’s G7 summit was overshadowed by a row between US President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over the traditional joint-communique, a statement from all the leaders issued at the end of the event.
This year, host Emmanuel Macron has jettisoned the statement to avoid another falling out and he has declared this year’s theme something that we can all agree on: fighting inequality.
G7 governments have helped to create the inequality crisis, they now have the responsibility to be part of the solutions
That supposedly includes G7 debutant and new Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who said in June while on the campaign trail: “If we are to unite our country and unite our society, then we must fight now, for those who feel left behind.”
But international agency Oxfam has warned that policies in place in all of the countries – US, Japan, UK, France, Germany, Italy and Canada – is driving inequality both home and away.
Their ‘G7’s Deadly Sins’ report has accused leaders of failing to implement progressive tax systems, fuelling climate change and supporting a shareholder-first business model that drives down the wages and conditions of workers.