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ZacTax event at CSW

From the left: Rev. Dora Arce Valentin, general secretary of the Reformed-Presbyterian Church in Cuba, Dr Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, Professor of Theological and Social Ethics at Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Rev. Dr Iva Carruthers, general secretary of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, and Rev. Dr Angelique Walker-Smith, WCC President from North America.

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The event was held parallel with the 68th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, which has the theme Accelerating the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls by addressing poverty and strengthening institutions and financing with a gender perspective.” 

The panel explored how proposals for global and national wealth and taxes, as well as reparations—as called for in the ecumenical Zacchaeus Tax (ZacTax) campaign—can help build a more just and sustainable planet including for women and girls.

The ZacTax Campaign, part of the New International Financial and Economic Architecture advocacy platform, is named for Zacchaeus the tax collector and seeks to transform the global tax system to deliver equity and make reparation for exploitation and injustice.

World Council of Churches president from North America Rev. Dr Angelique Walker-Smith, who serves as strategist for Pan-African and Orthodox Faith Engagement, Bread for the World, and National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA governing board member, in her opening remarks, spoke about why churches should care about the global tax system.

Can tax justice advance gender equity?” she asked, noting that the transformative evidence of our faith and biblical testimonies illustrates where taxation did and could have made the difference for all to live a more equitable life.

Shockingly, 252 of some of the richest men possess more wealth than 1 billion women and girls in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean combined!” said Walker-Smith. Taxing the richest ensures that wealth that is created by workers and subsidized by unpaid womens work is redistributed, helping at the same time to rebuild trust in democratic institutions and systems that respect and protect womens rights.

The Commission on the Status of Women zero draft outcome document—which contributes to the zero draft of the Pact for the Future,” the envisaged outcome of the UN Summit for the Future—calls on states to strengthen international tax cooperation to be more inclusive and effective, with a focus on combatting tax evasion and avoidance and curbing illicit financial flows and directing resources to end womens poverty.

It also calls for ensuring the progressivity of tax policies with a focus on taxing those with the highest ability to pay, including via wealth and corporate taxation, and preventing regressive taxation that disproportionately impacts women and girls with low or no incomes.” 

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ZacTax at CSW
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For Dr Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, Professor of Theological and Social Ethics at Church Divinity School of the Pacific, wealth taxation - as a tool for building economic and gender equity - is at the heart of religious faith.

“Wealth tax is a tool of neighbor love. The ZacTax brings home , makes concrete, just how  ordinary people may engage in the sacred movement to build gender equity and to abolish poverty through just taxation,” she said.

Rev. Dora Arce Valentin, general secretary of the Reformed-Presbyterian Church in Cuba, discussed why carbon and pollution taxes arena matter of ecological and gender justice. “How can tax justice contribute to climate and ecological reparations?” she asked. “Caring for ecosystems, and thus the relationships between individuals, societies, and the rest of creation, is a fundamental aspect of our humanity as economos(stewards).”

Rev. Dr Iva Carruthers, general secretary of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, explored tax justice and reparations. 

“If you want to improve the wellbeing of a community, improve the wellbeing of its women,” she said. “To the extent that women of faith believe in the imago dei, have an affinity of shared interests with other women across barriers of race, ethnicity, religion, geography, language…then women and men of faith will have to confront the challenge of being at the crossroads when the worst fears of Afro-phobia are manifested by a changing world in which people of color are demographically transforming the world and the instrument of reproduction are women; women of color producing children of color.”

The event was co-organised by the World Council of Churches, World Communion of Reformed Churches, Lutheran World Federation, World Methodist Council, and Council for World Mission as part of the New International Financial and Economic Architecture (NIFEA) initiative. 

WCC at the Commission on the Status of Women

#ZacTax for Gender Justice