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WSWS : News
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Inequality
Report documents extreme levels of global wealth inequality
By Joe Kay
8 December 2006
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A report released Tuesday by a United Nations group documents
the staggering levels of global inequality in household wealth.
The report gives a partial portrait of a world society characterized
by extreme concentrations of wealth in the hands of the richest
sections of the population, with the position of much of the remainder
ranging from general economic insecurity to dire poverty.
According to the report, published by the World Institute for
Development Economics Research (WIDER) and based on data from
2000, the top one percent of the worlds adult population
(about 37 million people) owns 40 percent of the worlds
wealth, while the top two percent owns over half and the top 10
percent owns 85 percent. Wealth is defined as physical and financial
assets minus liabilities.
In contrast, the bottom half of the worlds adult populationor
about 1.85 billion peopleowns collectively only one percent
of the worlds assets.
This means that the top one percent of the worlds adult
population owns 40 times more than the bottom 50 percent, and
nearly 3 times more than the bottom 90 percent. Put another way,
the authors note, The average member of the top decile [top
10 percent] owns nearly 3,000 times the mean wealth of the bottom
decile, and the average member of the top percentile [top one
percent] is more than 13,000 times richer.
The UN report is the first to estimate global distributions
of wealth, as opposed to income. The figures for many countries,
particularly in poorer regions of the world, were not available,
requiring that they be estimated. The report does not take into
account individuals under the age of 20, assuming they do not
possess any assets on their own and that their wealth is derivative
upon the adult population.
Using a common measure of inequality, the Gini coefficient,
the authors note that the global wealth Gini is higher, at 0.892,
than the corresponding figure for income. A Gini value of 0.892
roughly corresponds to the Gini value that would be recorded
in a 10-person population if one person had $1,000 and the remaining
9 people each had $1, the report notes.
One drawback of the study, due in part to the lack of extensive
data, is the absence of systematic internal examination of the
very top layers of the world population. A very large portion
of the worlds wealth is, in fact, concentrated in the top
one tenth of one percent of the population.
In addition to examining general global wealth inequality figures,
the report provides data on regional divisions in wealth concentration,
along with some figures on internal inequality within particular
countries. The bulk of the worlds wealth is concentrated
in a few countries, however these wealthy countries
are themselves extremely unequal.
The United States has a mean wealth of $144,000 per person,
the highest in the world, while India has a mean wealth of only
$6,500 (the poorest of those for which data was available). However,
in the US, wealth concentration is among the highest of those
countries with sufficient data to make these calculations.
According to the report, the top one percent of the population
in the US owns 32.7 percent of the wealth, trailing only Switzerland,
where the top one percent owns 34.8 percent. However, the US figure
excludes the very richest families that are included in the list
of Forbes billionaires. If these were included, the share
owned by the top one percent would rise to 34.7 percent.
The report has data only on the share owned by the top one
percent for 12 countries. Other countries with a particularly
high share of wealth owned by the top one percent include Denmark
(25 percent), Indonesia (28.7 percent) and the UK (23 percent).
The authors note that the share owned by the top one percent may
be significantly underestimated in several of the countries due
to error introduced by the fact that wealthier families are less
likely to respond to household surveys.
The share owned by the top ten percent, a figure that is available
for a larger set of countries, ranges from 41.4 percent in China
to 69.8 percent in the US.
The WIDER report also looks at the representation of different
countries and regions in each of the wealth levels. For example,
a significant section of the top 10 percent and the top one percent
of the worlds adult population live in the United States
(25 percent and 37 percent, respectively). According to the authors,
this is due to a large population combining with very high
wealth per capita and relatively unequal distribution. On
the other hand, the poorest layers of the worlds population
are most heavily concentrated in China, India, Africa and in the
poorer regions of Asia, Latin America and Europe.
However, it would be a mistake to conclude from these disparities
that wealth distribution is primarily regional, or that the bulk
of the population in the United States and other countries are
financially secure.
The UN figures indicate that 45.5 percent of the US adult population
(or about 92 million people) is in the top 10 percent of the worlds
population by wealth. However, to qualify for the top 10 percent
requires total assets of only $61,041. For the bulk of American
workers who reach this level, the majority of these assets are
tied up in their homes and vehicles. A US census report based
on 2000 data found that 67 percent of the population reported
ownership of a home, and that the median net worth of this house
(that is, the value of the house minus mortgages) amounted to
$59,000.
For large sections of the population in the US and other wealthy
countries, net assets are actually much less than this, even with
home ownership. A press release put out with the UN report noted,
While many poor people in poor countries are in debt, their
debts are relatively small in total. This is mainly due to the
absence of financial institutions that allow households to incur
large mortgage and consumer debts, as is increasingly the situation
in rich countries... Many people in high-income countries have
negative net worth andsomewhat paradoxicallyare among
the poorest people in the world in terms of household wealth.
Despite being the wealthiest country in the world, the savings
rate in the US is zero: most Americans borrow on average more
than they earn. As the housing market in the US and other countries
begins to slow, and home values decline, there will be a corresponding
decline in the relative net wealth.
Therefore, many of those classified in the top ten percent
of the worlds population by household wealth in fact live
from paycheck to paycheck, in a state of constant financial insecurity.
The level of internal inequality in the United States was highlighted
in a recent New York Times article, based on data collected
by the Internal Revenue Service (04 Income in US was
Below 2000 Level, by David Cay Johnston, November 28, 2006).
Looking at income figures, the Times noted that the
poorest 60 million Americans reported average incomes of less
than $7 a day in 2004. The richest one-tenth of one percent of
the population, or about 300,000 Americans, reported significantly
higher combined pretax income in 2004 than the poorest 120 million.
See Also:
The slide into povertyan
increasing likelihood for workers in Detroits suburbs
[6 November 2006]
A nine-figure fortune
wont get you much mention these daysForbes publishes
list of 400 richest Americans
[16 October 2006]
Home foreclosures soar in
US
[9 October 2006]
Hunger and malnutrition increase
in many parts of the world
[7 June 2006]
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