Celebrity Billionaires
Guess who…?Followed by a Debate
I am the world’s richest man, valued at
$56 billion
Now aged 51, I am involved with tackling AIDS in Africa and set up my own charity to
help them So far, I have given away
nearly $30bn of my fortune
to good causes
I made my money as the
inventor of Microsoft Windows
My name is Bill Gates
My name is Joanne and I am a 42 year
old writer I have sold over
325 million books - the last four have been the fastest selling books in
history
I have a fortune of £545 million
which makes me the thirteenth
richest woman in Britain
I have donated £22 million to Comic Relief
I am the author of the Harry Potter
books
My name is JK Rowling
I am the third richest man in the
world, worth $52 billion I made my
money through
investing in insurance companies
Recently I gave $30
billion of my fortune to
the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation - the largest
single donation
ever made in the USA
I only earn $100,000 a
year and still live in the
same house that I bought in 1958 for $31,500
My Name is Warren Buffet
I am 53 and the world's only black
billionaire for three years in a
row I am also,
according to many
assessments, the most influential woman in the
world
I am an influential book critic, an
Oscar nominated actress, and a
magazine publisher, as well
as an award winning chat show
host In 2005 alone I donated $303
million to charity
My chat show is called The
Oprah Winfrey Show
My name is Oprah
Winfrey
I am a Russian oil billionaire worth
$18.2 billion
In Russia, I am well known as the governor of
Chukotka in the far northeast of the
country
I am best known in the UK as the
owner of Chelsea Football Club
My name is Roman
Abramovich
Is it ok for the rich to keep getting richer?
You may have heard the phrase: “The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer”
Is this true? Where’s bulging with wealth over time? And is the wealth gap widening?
Today’s aimsTo understand that global inequalities of wealth are getting worse
To identify ways in which the trickle-down of wealth can occur from the rich to the poor
To appreciate why this problem could need tackling
DebateIn pairs, sort the cards into ‘the problems with billionaires’ or ‘why billionaires are great’Now plan why:
‘STATEMENT 1 – Trickle down – Billionaires already do enough to help the poor as their wealth trickles down to the poor and benefits a lot of people’
OR ‘STATEMENT 2 – Tackle problem – Billionaires need to do more to help the poor, they hold on to too much of their wealth and they don’t need it all’
Whole class debateIn pairs you will be given one of the two different viewpoints.
You will then need to write a 2-3 minute speech. (I will time this and stop you if you exceed the time limit.)
Both people need to speak – so 1 minute 30 seconds each.
The class will be divided into the two viewpoints and after each speech you will be able to ask 1 question to try and point out the weaknesses in their speech.
Winning the debate
This actually counts!
The group at wins the debate will receive a 5 mark extra credit score added to their marks.
Facts you should know If the earth’s population was shrunk to exactly 100 people, and all proportions were kept the same, there would be:
6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States
8 would have money in the bank The wealth of the world’s three richest people is more than the combined wealth of all less developed countries.
The wealth of the world’s 200 richest people is more than the combined incomes of 41% of the world’s people. By making an annual contribution of just 1% of their wealth, those 200 people could provide primary education for every child on the world (currently 72 million children of primary school age do not go to school).
The gap between the world’s richest countries and the world’s poorest countries is widening rapidly.