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More than 500 economists and other leading experts, including a Nobel laureate and a former United States treasury secretary, on Friday urged G20 leaders to establish an international panel to tackle extreme wealth disparities.

The panel was a key recommendation of a task force created by G20 host South Africa and led by Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz ahead of the leaders’ meeting that begins Saturday.

Modelled on the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC], it would analyze all aspects of inequality — from land ownership to tax avoidance — and seek to inform policymaking.

In an open letter published on Friday, the experts — also including Nobel laureate Daron Acemoglu, France’s Thomas Piketty, and former U.S. treasury secretary and former Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen — backed the idea.

“We are profoundly concerned … that extreme concentrations of wealth translate into undemocratic concentrations of power, unravelling trust in our societies and polarising our politics,” they said.

The Stiglitz report found that the world’s richest one per cent captured 41 per cent of all new wealth between 2000 and 2024.

In contrast, just one per cent went to the poorest 50 per cent, according to data from the World Inequality Lab.

“Inequality is not inevitable; it is a policy choice,” the letter said.

“Clear and proven steps can be taken to reduce it and build more equal societies and economies,” they said, adding that experts stood ready to volunteer their time, as many do with the IPCC.

South Africa, which will host the G20 leaders’ summit in Johannesburg on Nov. 22–23 — the first ever held in Africa — has made tackling economic inequality a central theme of its presidency.

It is unclear whether the resolution will be adopted, as the G20 is not a treaty-based organization like the United Nations and has no legal charter or constitution, functioning instead as an informal forum that operates by consensus.

Members are split over a range of policy issues, and the group’s richest member, the United States, has said it will boycott the Johannesburg summit, accusing South Africa’s agenda of being anti-American.

Founded in 1999, the group brings together 19 countries plus the European Union and the African Union, representing about 85 per cent of global GDP and roughly two-thirds of the world’s population.

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