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Millionaire Statistics: A millionaire is someone whose total wealth is equal to or more than one million units of currency. The value of one million can change depending on the currency used, and in some countries, the currency might not be worth as much due to inflation. This means that being a millionaire in certain places, like Hong Kong or Taiwan, may not be as impressive because the local currency has less value.
For example, in Zimbabwe in 2007, having a million units of currency would not have made someone wealthy due to extreme inflation. So, when people talk about being a millionaire, they usually mean having at least one million U.S. dollars ($), euros, or British pounds (£), which are considered strong currencies. We shall shed more light on Millionaire Statistics through this article.
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Data from the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report shows that in 2023 there were just under 30 million millionaires in the US.
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Research done by the Credit Suisse Research Institute states that the country with the highest number of millionaires is the U.S., with nearly 30 million millionaires and 17 million people with wealth up to $5 million! To put numbers in perspective, China, Japan, Germany, the U.K., and France, added together, have a total of 17 million millionaires!
Iceland was the country with the highest rate of millionaires worldwide in 2022, with more than 20 percent of the adult population owning assets worth more than one million U.S. dollars. Luxembourg followed behind with 16 percent of the population being millionaires, with Switzerland in third.
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New Jersey has the highest rate of millionaires, with 9.76% of households showing a net worth of $1 million or above. That means that 246,058 New Jersey households are millionaires.
This statistic shows the number of millionaire households in the United States from 2006 to 2020. As 2020, the number households with a net worth of one million U.S. dollars or more (excluding primary residence) stood at 11.6 million, up from 11 million in 2019.
In 2023, there were nearly 22 million people with a net worth of over one million U.S. dollars in the United States, which put the country on the top of the ranking. China was ranked second in that year, with more than six million individuals with wealth exceeding one million U.S. dollars. The United Kingdom followed in third with around three million millionaires.
As of 2020, New Jersey had the highest share of households with a net worth of one million or more U.S. dollars in the United States, followed by Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Hawaii.
In 2020, California had the highest number of millionaire households in the U.S., with 1.14 million households having one million or more in investible assets. This is nearly double the 650,216 millionaire households in Texas, the state with the second-highest number.
The statistic shows the number of millionaire households in the United States from 1997 to 2015, by net worth. In 1997, about 5.3 million households had a net worth of 1 million U.S. dollars or more, excluding primary residence.
The millionaire population in Singapore stood at around 526.4 thousand in 2021 and is projected to increase to about 592 thousand in 2026. This estimated growth in the millionaire population reflects the trend of increasing household wealth in Singapore, which grew by more than 146 percent since 2000.
Millionaire’s playground
In 2022, the Economist Intelligence Unit ranked Singapore as the world’s most expensive city alongside Hong Kong and Paris. The high cost of living in Singapore is in large part due to the extremely high cost of owning a car, as well as high property and food prices. With the tenth highest average wealth per adult in the world, and relatively low financial inequality, it seems that the residents of Singapore are able to afford life in the city with the third most expensive beer prices in the world.
Declining wealth in old age
The reality, however, is far less glamorous. While the median wealth per adult increased in 2019 from 2018, it was still the second-lowest value in the past five years. Many Singaporeans are feeling the pinch, especially the most vulnerable members of society, such as the elderly, who make up the majority of the workforce in jobs such as cleaning. Worryingly, many Singaporeans are also not financially prepared for retirement. This could lead to increasing inequality in the future, with many people unable to afford the lifestyle that they are accustomed to.
In 2019, 34 billionaire dropouts were reported all over the world. This number relates to 1.7 percent of people who were no longer part of global billionaire population.
Looking at the average billionaire's wealth worldwide by asset allocation, a clear majority of the wealth among male billionaires was made up of public holdings. Banking and financing is the industry to which the highest share of male billionaires devote most of their time.
The statistic shows the number of millionaires in mainland China from 2015 to 2023, as estimated by a research institute in China. According to the report, there were 4.15 million millionaires owning assets worth over six million yuan - roughly equivalent to one million U.S. dollars - and 1,69 million millionaires with personal wealth of over ten million yuan in mainland China in 2023.
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This dataset is about books and is filtered where the book is Millionaire under the mistletoe. It has 7 columns such as author, BNB id, book, book publisher, and ISBN. The data is ordered by publication date (descending).
This data package includes the underlying data and files to replicate the calculations, charts, and tables presented in The Origins of the Superrich: The Billionaire Characteristics Database, PIIE Working Paper 16-1. If you use the data, please cite as: Freund, Caroline, and Sarah Oliver. (2016). The Origins of the Superrich: The Billionaire Characteristics Database. PIIE Working Paper 16-1. Peterson Institute for International Economics.
The statistic shows the distribution of U.S. millionaires in 2013, by race and ethnicity. As of 2013, about 76 percent of U.S. millionaires were White/Caucasian.
Additional information on racial income inequality
The issue of racial inequality in regards to income and wealth has been a problem through the entirety of the history of the United States. The statistic above demonstrates how the percentage of millionaires that identify as Black/African Americans is disproportionate to the share of the population overall. While the disproportionate number of millionaires demonstrates an undesirable degree of income inequality it is at the bottom of the wealth ladder within American society that the issue is most pressing. The overrepresentation of African Americans in contrast to the population in unemployment statistics are cause for concern on the part of the government and society as a whole. In 2014, nearly 25 percent of surveyed families who placed themselves in the income bracket of under ten thousand dollars identified as black.
The percentage of non-white female business owners perhaps demonstrates that barriers to wealth exist but are diminished in unison. As barriers to wealth generation are removed for women, similar barriers are also being broken to allow for greater equality in the economic opportunities offered across the population of the United States. A central issue for policy makers is the time delay associated with policies aimed at reversing these inequalities. This was reflected in the 2015 Democratic and Republican presidential primary campaigns. Despite many major candidates discussing the issue none put forward meaningful proposals to address the problem. Even Senator Bernie Sanders who made addressing income inequality the cornerstone failed to separate the issue from income inequality generally. However, the global attention gained by movements such as ‘Black Lives Matter’ shows issues of racial inequality are prominent in the discourse of sections of the wider population if not forming a cornerstone of the political discourse in the United States.
Over 4000 millionaires were projected to emigrate from India in 2024. There was a decline in emigration as compared to 2022. High economic freedom, tax conditions, or investments are usually the reasons for high-net-worth population migration.
In 2023, nearly two-thirds of the male billionaires were self-made, whereas less than one-fourth of female billionaires were the same. Around 38 percent of the female billionaires in the world inherited their fortunes.
As of 2013, about 19 percent of U.S. millionaires were Millennials, aged between 18 and 31.
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Millionaire Statistics: A millionaire is someone whose total wealth is equal to or more than one million units of currency. The value of one million can change depending on the currency used, and in some countries, the currency might not be worth as much due to inflation. This means that being a millionaire in certain places, like Hong Kong or Taiwan, may not be as impressive because the local currency has less value.
For example, in Zimbabwe in 2007, having a million units of currency would not have made someone wealthy due to extreme inflation. So, when people talk about being a millionaire, they usually mean having at least one million U.S. dollars ($), euros, or British pounds (£), which are considered strong currencies. We shall shed more light on Millionaire Statistics through this article.