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12 Dec 2013
The Top 1% richest individuals Now Controls 39% Of The World's Wealth
The wealthiest 1 percent now
control 39 percent of the world's
wealth, and their share is likely to
grow in the coming years,
according to a new report.
The world's total private wealth
grew 7.8 percent last year to $135
trillion, according to the Boston
Consulting Group's Global Wealth
report. The top 1 percent control
$52.8 trillion, and those worth $5
million or more control nearly a
quarter of the world's wealth.
That concentration is likely to
increase in the coming years as
the wealth of the wealthy grows
faster than overall global wealth.
The number of millionaires in the
world surged by 10 percent year,
reaching 13.8 million. The study
predicts that global wealth will
grow around 4.8 percent a year
over the next five years—though
millionaires will see their wealth
grow nearly twice as fast.
Those worth $5 million or more
will see their wealth grow 8
percent, while those worth more
than $100 million will see their
wealth grow 9.2 percent. The
$100-million-plus group will see
their share of global wealth grow
to 6.8 percent in 2017 from the
current 5.5 percent.
What's driving the wealth of the
wealthy? It depends on the
country. In the developed world—
the U.S. and Europe— it's mainly
stocks. And stocks have been on a
tear this year in the U.S., which
has mainly benefited the top 5
percent, who own 60 percent of all
individually held stocks.
(Read More: Surging Stock Market
Cheers Up the Rich)
In developing markets, the main wealth
creator is economic growth and savings. Yet
the amount of wealth held in stocks and in
offshore wealth (again mainly held by the
wealthy) in developing countries is also
growing. The amount of wealth held in
equities in Asia (excluding Japan) surged by
21.9 percent in 2012.
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