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Countries by median wealth ( US dollars) per adult. From 2021 publication of Credit Suisse. This is a list of countries of the world by wealth per adult or household, from sources such as UBS 's annual Global Wealth Databook [1] and the OECD 's Better Life Index. [2] Wealth includes both financial and non-financial assets.
National net wealth, also known as national net worth, is the total sum of the value of a country's assets minus its liabilities. It refers to the total value of net wealth possessed by the residents of a state at a set point in time. [1]
List of countries by gross financial wealth per adult, UBS Global Wealth Databook 2023. This list shows selected countries, sorted by highest financial gross wealth per adult. Taken from UBS' Global Wealth Databook. The net average wealth is calculated by subtracting the debt from the mean financial wealth.
Net worth per capita (PPP) Net worth per capita (exchange rates) Percent of world net worth (PPP) Percent of world net worth (exchange rates) Real GDP per capita (PPP) Real GDP per capita (exchange rates) Percent of world GDP (PPP) Percent of world GDP (exchange rates) USA 4.67 71.39 143,727 143,727 25.4 32.65 35,619 35,619 21.97 31.49 Canada 0.5
Average net worth—which heavily weights extremely high-wealth families—substantially exceeds median net worth (families in the fiftieth percentile). Further, average net worth outgrew median net worth from 2019 through 2022. According to PolitiFact, in 2011 the 400 wealthiest Americans "have more wealth than half of all Americans combined."
This is a list of the world's countries measuring the income of the richest one percent each (before taxes and transfers). The source of the data is the United Nations Development Programme, and refers to the latest available date.
The 20th Percentile. With a $10,000 net worth, this group struggles financially. Any assets are often offset by liabilities. Homeownership and investments are rare in this percentile.
Income of a given percentage as a ratio to median, for 10th (red), 20th, 50th, 80th, 90th, and 95th (grey) percentile, for 1967–2003 in the United States (50th percentile is 1:1 by definition) Particularly common to compare a given percentile to the median, as in the first chart here; compare seven-number summary , which summarizes a ...