Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Ooops, the rich are richer than we figured, new ECB study says

As if the nagging feeling of average folks needed confirmation, the European Central Bank just published a Working Paper saying that the rich are somewhat richer than we thought.

The paper's title is statistical lingo but happens to make a very catchy one for non-experts:
How fat is the top tail of the wealth distribution?

For Europeans who until now have pointed to their own official statistics and said, well, we have a big proportion of wealth owned by one or five percent of the population, but look at how big the difference is in the U.S., the study serves as a damper.

The study author uses the two common surveys of wealth distribution plus the Forbes Rich list and does his magic.

The result for the Germans on the Forbes list?

Table 4 of the paper says 53 Germans on the Forbes list own 2.4% of the country's wealth.

This is one tenth of a percent higher than for the U.S., where 396 individuals own 2.3% of the country's wealth.

This result is in stark contrast to the image of Germany as a more egalitarian, more unionized, or - as the old term would have it - more "socialist" society.

The U.S. and Germany are the only two out of ten countries listed that exceed the 2% share. The next highest one is Austria at 1.2, and everybody else in that table is under 1%.

Our take home point from the working paper?

Life is full of surprises. And we look forward to see what the "other press" makes out of the study.



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