Net household wealth is defined as the marketable
value of financial assets plus non-financial assets (principally housing and
land) less debts. World total net household wealth
has risen from $ 117 trillion end 2000 (a mean of $31,415 and a median of
$1,867 for the 3.7 billion adults[3]
alive then) to $ 280.3 trillion by mid-2017 (a mean $ 56,541 and a median of $
3,582 for 5.0 billion adults).
Table
1: Net Household Wealth, % of world total
2000
|
2010
|
2017
|
|
Africa
|
0.9
|
1.2
|
0.9
|
Asia-Pacific (ex Japan)
|
7.3
|
11.1
|
11.2
|
China
|
4.1
|
7.5
|
10.3
|
India
|
1.0
|
1.7
|
1.8
|
Latin America
|
3.0
|
3.7
|
2.9
|
Total South
|
16.3
|
25.2
|
27.1
|
Europe
|
29.6
|
33.7
|
28.4
|
Japan
|
17.0
|
10.7
|
8.4
|
North America
|
37.1
|
30.4
|
36.0
|
Total North
|
83.7
|
74.8
|
72.8
|
Source: Credit
Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2017 and 2010
Over the period
2000-2017, net household wealth has indeed shifted South (actually more East
than South). In relative terms, the group of rich countries has lost more than
ten percentage points of the world household wealth. Consequently, global
wealth inequality has been reduced during the 2000s as median levels of net household wealth are much higher in rich than in developing countries. Most of the shift toward
the South occurred during the first decade when income convergence was rapid,
not least due to booming raw materials. In the 2010s, by contrast, gains in the
percentage share of world household wealth were given back by Africa and Latin
America; only China kept on gaining a higher relative share in world wealth.
Table
2: Median Net Wealth per Adult, in constant $
2000
|
2010
|
2017
|
|
Africa
|
499
|
939
|
438
|
Asia-Pacific*
|
1,322
|
3,400
|
2,997
|
China
|
2,349
|
4,628
|
6,689
|
India
|
704
|
1,301
|
1,295
|
LAC
|
3,099
|
6,388
|
5,159
|
World
|
1,867
|
3,709
|
3,582
|
Note:
Asia-Pacific including Japan
Source: Credit
Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2017 and 2010
For lack of data on standard deviation underlying the
various data on household wealth, Table 2 does not provide evidence on skewness
nor on Asia-Pacific excluding Japan. Still, Table 2 reveals that the first decade
of the 21st century did not only lower global wealth inequality but
also went along with remarkable gains in median wealth. Broadly, median net household
wealth doubled in all non-OECD regions listed in Table 2 during the period
2000-2010. Since then (post the Great Financial Crisis; GFC), however, median
household wealth only kept rising in China while it dropped sharply in Africa.
Despite being shown in constant US dollar, the numbers may indicate that sharp
real currency depreciation of local currencies in countries with net raw
material exports have dented mean household wealth since the GFC and as a
result of lower commodity demand by China, including by inflating household
debt.
To sum up, the 2000-2010 episode of rapid income
convergence of low- and middle-income convergence in the wake of China´s
commodity-hungry growth spurt has not only lowered global income inequality. It
also helped lower global wealth inequality, despite higher within-country
income and wealth inequality. Median household wealth rose in all developing
regions while it dropped or stagnated in Japan and North America. During the
present decade, alas, Africa and Latin America have seen median household
wealth levels drop again.
[1] Th. Piketty (2014), Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Harvard
University Press.
[2] J. B. Davies, R. Lluberas and A. Shorrocks (2010): Global Wealth Databook, Credit Suisse Research Institute. The same authors explain the
estimation methodology and draw lessons learned about trends
in the level and distribution of global wealth up to 2014 in “Estimating
the level and distribution of global wealth, 2000–14”, WIDER Working Paper
2016/3, UNU-Wider.
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