It uses data from Credit Suisse from October for the report, which urges leaders meeting in Davos this week to take action on inequality.
Oxfam also calculated that the richest 62 people in the world had as much wealth as the poorest half of the global population.
It criticised the work of lobbyists and the amount of money kept in tax havens.
Oxfam predicted that the 1% would overtake the rest of the world this time last year.
It
takes cash and assets worth $68,800 (£48,300) to get into the top 10%,
and $760,000 (£533,000) to be in the 1%. That means that if you own an
average house in London without a mortgage, you are probably in the 1%.
The
figures carry various caveats, for example, information about the
wealth of the super-rich is hard to come by, which Credit Suisse says
means its estimates of the proportion of wealth held by the 10% and the
1% is "likely to err on the low side".
As a global report, the
figures also necessarily include some estimates of levels of wealth in
countries from which accurate statistics are not available.
Oxfam
said that the 62 richest people having as much wealth as the poorest
50% of the population is a remarkable concentration of wealth, given
that it would have taken 388 individuals to have the same wealth as the
bottom 50% in 2010.
"Instead of an economy that works for the prosperity
of all, for future generations, and for the planet, we have instead
created an economy for the 1%," Oxfam's report says.
The trend
over the period that Credit Suisse has been carrying out this research
has been that the proportion of wealth held by the top 1% fell gradually
from 2000 to 2009 and has risen every year since then.
In fact,
it is only in the 2015 figures that the proportion held by the top 1%
overtakes the share taken by them in the first report in 2000.
Oxfam calls on governments to take action to reverse this trend.
It wants workers paid a living wage and the gap with executive rewards to be narrowed.
It
calls for an end to the gender pay gap, compensation for unpaid care
and the promotion of equal land and inheritance rights for women.
And
it wants governments to take action on lobbying, reducing the price of
medicines, taxing wealth rather than consumption and using progressive
public spending to tackle inequality.
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