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What if you were as rich as the entire city of London?
The city's GDP is roughly $500 billion.
But if you combine their wealth,
the eight richest people in the world
are worth about that much.
They control more money than
the bottom half of the world's population.
There were about 18 million households in the world
with private wealth of at least $1 million in 2016.
Those millionaires control around
45% of total private global wealth.
Let's break that down.
Households worth between $1 million and $20 million
accounted for 28% of the world's wealth.
Those worth $20 million to $100 million owned 9%.
And ultra-high net worth households above $100 million
controlled 8% of global wealth.
The share of overall wealth held
by millionaires is growing fast.
Millionaire households are expected to own more than
half of total global private wealth by 2021.
Their share was one-third 10 years ago.
Why?
Part of the reason is gains in the stock market,
where a lot of the wealthy investors put their money.
The United States is home to the
biggest number of millionaires,
with around 7 million households
owning more than $1 million in investable assets.
China ranks second.
Japan third.
The U.K. comes in at fourth.
And Canada ranks fifth.
When it comes to the world's wealth,
well, a lot of it runs in the family.
It's estimated that one-third of billionaires
inherited their wealth.
Investment firm UBS says that in the next two decades,
less than 500 people will hand over
more than $2 trillion to their heirs.
That's a sum about the size of the GDP of India,
a country with 1.3 billion people.
Here's the thing,
you don't have to be a billionaire or even a millionaire
to be among the world's wealthy.
To be considered in the top 1% here in the U.K.
a single earner with a spouse and two kids,
under the age of 14,
would need to make around $430,000 before tax.
But there's a key difference between income and wealth.
Income is what you earn,
like your monthly paycheck.
Wealth is the total measure of your financial assets,
like your home, your car, or those government bonds
you got from your great-grandmother.
By some measures, wealth is more
unequally distributed than income.
Recent data suggests the wealth of half of adults
in the world is no more than $2,222.
And a lot of people in this group have negative wealth,
meaning their debts exceed
the values of their assets.
There's plenty of disagreement over
evening out the world's wealth concentration.
But even some of the richest people in the world,
like Bill Gates or Warren Buffett,
agree that addressing solutions to wealth inequality
can be worth, well, a lot.
Hey guys, it's Elizabeth.
Thanks so much for watching.
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