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Millionaire

A millionaire is a person who has a net worth or wealth of more than one million United States dollars, euros, UK pounds or units of a similarly valued currency.

In many countries or cultures, a certain level of prestige is associated with being a millionaire, which makes that amount of wealth a goal for many. However, the status of millionaire is no longer as exclusive as it once was, and so other descriptions, like multi-millionaire or billionaire have come into use to describe the highest levels of individual wealth. The increasing number of millionaires is partially due to inflation: a million dollars, for example, provides far less purchasing power today than it did in the 19th century.

Many individuals are millionaires on paper, but possess mostly non-liquid and inaccessible assets, such as real estate and automobiles.

Many lotteries offer prizes of a million dollars or more.

Forbes and Fortune magazines maintain lists of people based on their net worth and are generally considered authorities on the subject. According to Forbes' 17th annual list of the richest people published in 2004 there are 587 US-dollar billionaires in the world. The number of millionaires is much, much higher; millionaires form a small but significant fraction of the population within rich countries. There are entire neighborhoods in many developed countries where a majority of families have a net worth over a million dollars. In addition, there are some fields where a majority of workers become millionaires.

Contents

World Wealth Report

The "World Wealth Report" is compiled annually by Merrill Lynch and Capgemini.

2003

The 2004 report for the year 2003 tells that "7.7 million people globally each hold more than US$1 million in financial-asset wealth, an increase of 7.5% over 2002." That's up 7.5% (a net 500,000 people) compared with 2002. World population growth 2003 over 2002 was 1.2% (6,299,763,405/6,226,933,918=1.0117) ([1] http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/worldpop.html ) (estimated "midyear population"). Note that some of these people gained the status due to the weakening US dollar vs the currency which their financial assets are priced in. The US$ depreciated 16% to the € (1.05/1.25=0.84) during 2003 from ~$1.05 in January 2003 to ~$1.25 in January 2004 ([2] http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=EURUSD=X&t=2y&l=on&z=m&q=l&c= ).

Note that this is "financial-asset wealth", not real estate wealth, or "net worth" wealth. There are two categories, "high net worth individuals" HNWIs, with more than US$1 million in financial assets, and Ultra-HNIWs, with more than US$30 million in financial assets.

See also

Lists

External links

  • World Wealth Report http://www.ml.com/about/press_release/20040615-1_world_wealth_pr.htm


Last updated: 02-08-2005 07:59:49
Last updated: 05-03-2005 17:50:55