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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Trickle-Up Economics: New Report Reveals Staggering Global Wealth Concentration

By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality. Posted October 8, 2007.


A new business study on global household wealth documents how the world's wealth is continuing to concentrate in the pockets of the awesomely affluent.

The world's non-wealthy households haven't done so well over the last half-dozen years, says a new report released last week by a major global business consulting company.

From 2001 through 2006, reports the Boston Consulting Group, the non-wealthy of the world -- those households holding less than $100,000 in financial assets -- saw the total value of their assets slightly decline.

Over those same years, the consulting group's new Global Wealth 2007 documents, total world wealth actually increased, up a brisk 7.5 percent just last year alone

So where did all that new wealth end up? At the top. So far this century, the 16.5 percent of global households with at least $100,000 to invest have seen their assets soar 64 percent in value, to $84.5 trillion.

A huge chunk of that wealth has settled in the portfolios of millionaire households, those families with at least $1 million in "assets under management" -- a wealth scorecard calculation that excludes personal residences as well as jewelry, artwork, and other luxury collectibles.

These millionaire households, just 0.7 percent of the globe's total households, now hold over a third of the world's wealth. Where will you find these millionaire households? Nearly half hail from North America, with about a quarter from Europe.

The data for the new Boston Consulting Group report come from 62 countries that represent over 96 percent of global GDP. The authors also surveyed 111 wealth managers, who together oversee client accounts worth $9.9 trillion.

The newly released Boston Consulting Group figures match up fairly consistently with global wealth stats released this past June by researchers with Merrill Lynch and Capgemini. That study counted, world-wide, 9.5 million "high net worth individuals" with over $1 million in financial assets.

The Boston Consulting Group, using a different survey methodology, places the global millionaire total at 9.6 million.

Managing the assets of these wealthy, the new Boston Consulting Group report finds, can be an enormously lucrative line of work. The 111 wealth managers BCG surveyed boasted an astounding "median pretax profit margin” of 34.7 percent.

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See more stories tagged with: inequality

Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.



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The net worth of the world's 50 richest billionaires is greater than the wealth of the poorest 10%
Posted by: yellow on Oct 8, 2007 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is what it's all come to in 2007, a year in which net global FDI inflows come to about 3% of World GDP or about $1.5 trillion. About 2% of the world's individuals own about half the global wealth as of 2000. The world is concentrating wealth through globalization. This skews the global distribution of income. It doesn't benefit most people.

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I am appalled and SHOCKED...
Posted by: peacelf on Oct 8, 2007 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to think that Pizzigati believes anyone living in the U.S. doesn't know what he knows!

This has become so common a fact of economic matters that it's expected, indeed honored among the wealthy corporate nihilists and-- may be you didn't know this--the president agrees with it, even fosters and nurtures it like a Viagra-erect penis! (forgive the graphic metaphor but it works on so many levels.)

Vote for Hillary! She's one of them, too.

Peace

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» Tough lesson Posted by: mdruss42
Anatomy of an information-age highway robbery
Posted by: eddie torres on Oct 8, 2007 7:12 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pizzigati: "So far this century, the 16.5 percent of global households with at least $100,000 to invest have seen their assets soar 64 percent in value, to $84.5 trillion."

That includes "assets under management" like 100 privately-owned submarines, 50 yachts longer than 237 feet (72 meters), 11,000 private "business" jets, and untold limos, supercars, wine collections, art collections, yachts to showcase the wine-and-art collections, etc.

All of which are desperately necessary to run a global capital menagerie that seeks perpetual dominance of "haves" over "others."

Lest we forget, those "high net worth individuals" with over $1 million in financial assets are the SEC-approved investors in the hedge funds that facilitated the sub-prime real estate raid on "low net worth individuals" equity and savings.

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thekidde
Posted by: thekidde on Oct 11, 2007 12:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's getting to be the time to "eat the rich". The head of Toyota Motors makes just under $1M a year, the head of GM, Mr. Wagoner, makes just under $10M a year - what's wrong with this picture? Wagoner does nothing to deserve this compensation (as is true with 95% of corporate America's executive elite). Pitchforks and torches may well be needed to take back America for the individuals who actually do the work!
The Golden Rule of Business - the guys with the gold, make the rules - is killing America.

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Stevor
Posted by: stevor on Oct 11, 2007 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's the surprise? It's not any different from what's been going on for centuries. We essentially have a few kings who control the wealth (the economy) and they take advantage of all those below them. To those who believe in conspiracies, it's the Trilateral Commission group.

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