"The past 30 years have
seen far greater wealth creation than the Gilded Age."
During a year in which so much
of the world faced deep
poverty, the corrosive
effects of austerity, and extreme weather caused
by the worsening human-caused climate crisis—from devastating
hurricanes to deadly
wildfires and floods—one class of individuals raked in more money in 2017
than any other year in recorded history: the world's billionaires.
According to the Swiss bank
UBS's fifth annual billionaires
report published on Friday, billionaires across the globe increased
their wealth by $1.4 trillion last year—an astonishing 20 percent—bringing
their combined wealth to $8.9 trillion.
"The past 30 years have
seen far greater wealth creation than the Gilded Age," the UBS report notes.
"That period bred generations of families in the U.S. and Europe who went
on to influence business, banking, politics, philanthropy, and the arts for
more than 100 years."
UBS estimates that the world
now has a total of 2,158 billionaires, with 179 billionaires created last year.
The United States alone is home to 585 billionaires—the most in the world—up
from 563 in 2017.
Meanwhile, according
to a June report by U.N. Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and
Human Rights Philip Alston, 18.5 million Americans live in extreme poverty and
"5.3 million live in Third World conditions of absolute poverty."
No money for health or
infrastructure, all the money in the world for yachts. https://t.co/AYa5Mk8L9j
— Josh Shepperd
(@joshshepperd) October
26, 2018
A significant percentage of
the "newly created" billionaires are hardly the self-made men—and
they are overwhelmingly
men—of popular lore. According to UBS, 40 of the 179 new billionaires
created last year inherited their wealth—a trend that has driven an explosion
of wealth inequality over the past several decades.
According to UBS, this trend
will continue to accelerate over the next 20 years, given that there are
currently 701 billionaires over the age of 70.
"A major wealth
transition has begun. Over the past five years (2012–2017), the sum passed by
deceased billionaires to beneficiaries has grown by an average of 17 percent
each year," the UBS report concludes. "Over the next two decades we
expect a wealth transition of $3.4 trillion worldwide—almost 40 percent of
current total billionaire wealth."
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