Millionaire
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A millionaire is an individual who resides in a household whose net worth or wealth exceeds one million units of any currency. It can also be a person who owns 1 million units of currency in one bank account or savings account. Depending on the currency, a certain level of prestige is associated with being a millionaire, which makes that amount of wealth a goal for many. The status of millionaire, however, is no longer as exclusive as it once was.[1]
The increasing number of millionaires is partially due to inflation: a million U.S. dollars, for example, provides far less purchasing power today than it did in the 19th century[citation needed]. Nevertheless, it still ensures a privileged lifestyle for those becoming millionaires. American sociologist Leonard Beeghley classifies all households with net worths exceeding $1 million as "the rich."
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The increasing prevalence of people with more and more money has given rise to additional terms to further differentiate millionaires. A multimillionaire has a net worth of more than two million units of currency and a hectomillionaire has a net worth of more than 100 million units of currency (but the technically incorrect centimillionaire with a net worth of 1/100 of one million or 10 thousand units, strictly speaking is often used erroneously to mean the same thing).[citation needed] While statistics regarding financial assets and net worth are presented by household, the term is also often used to describe only the individual who has amassed the assets as millionaire. That is, even though the term statistically refers only to households, common usage is often in reference only to an individual.
As a result of the declining prestige associated with the word millionaire, a neologism has been coined by some financial analysts for those whose net worth is in the millions but who are not considered "super-rich": mMillionaire, or middle-class millionaire.[2] Such distinctions have gained some traction, as evidenced by a video released by The Onion lampooning the struggle of the rich to keep up with the super-rich.[3]
Recently there has been some controversy over how to correctly determine a person's status as a millionaire. One of the two most commonly used measurements is net worth, which counts the total value of all property owned by a household minus the household's debts. According to this definition, a household owning an $800k home, $50k furnishing, two cars worth $60k, a $60k IRA, $45k in mutual funds, and a $325k vacation home with a $250k mortgage, $40k in car loans, and $25k in credit card debt would be worth $1,025,000 and every individual in this household would thus be a millionaire. However, according to the financial assets measurement, equity in one's principal residence is excluded. So are all other fixed assets, such as the car and furniture. In recent years homes have become very valuable, due to the recent real estate bubble: In some neighborhoods, such as Palo Alto, the average house is worth more than $1 million USD. For this reason there are many people in million-dollar homes whose net worth is far short of a million—in some cases the net worth is actually negative. For this reason, those who market goods, services, and investments to high net worth individuals are careful to specify a net worth "not counting principal residence."
While millionaires constitute only a small percentage of the population, they hold vast control over economic resources with the most powerful and prominent individuals usually ranking among them. Forbes and Fortune magazines maintain lists of people based on their net worth and are generally considered authorities on the subject. According to Forbes' latest annual list of the richest people published in 2007 there are 946 US-dollar billionaires in the world. The number of millionaires is much higher.
Depending on how we calculate it, a million US dollars in 1900 is equivalent to 2006 US dollars of [4]
$24,766,584.77 using the Consumer Price Index, $21,224,697.05 using the GDP deflator, $114,128,571.43 using the unskilled wage, $162,813,054.25 using the nominal GDP per capita, $641,531,874.47 using the relative share of GDP,
Thus we see that at the turn of the 20th century one needed twenty to a couple of hundred times more US dollars than one does today, to qualify as a millionaire (in the US).
Another commonly used term is multimillionaire. As the term implies, multimillionaire applies to those individuals residing in households with a net worth or wealth of two million or more. Only a small minority of millionaire households are indeed multimillionaire households. The term also has a more prestigious connotation than millionaire.
Roughly 1.0% of high net worth individuals (HNWIs) can also correctly be identified as ultra-high-net-worth individuals (ultra-HNWIs), those who reside in households with a net worth or wealth of 30 million or more. There are approximately 95,000 ultra-HNWIs in the world with 61,600 or 64.8% residing in the United States and Europe.
The "World Wealth Report" is a report on individuals with a net worth of at least $1 million in all assets except their "primary residence". The report is compiled annually by Capgemini for Merrill Lynch.
World Wealth Report 2007 - "The 11th annual World Wealth Report from Merrill Lynch/Capgemini finds the World’s High Net Worth (HNW) population growing to 9.5 million with their assets rising to $37.2 trillion."[5]
Some growth in international wealth and the number of high net worth individuals can be attributed to the weakness of the US dollar, as stated in the report.
| HNWIs (more than $1 million, in 2006) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Region | Number | Percentage of regional population |
| Global | 9,500,000 | 0.15% |
| North America | 3,200,000 | 0.62% |
| Europe | 2,900,000 | 0.41% |
| Asia-Pacific | 2,600,000 | 0.06% |
| Latin America | 400,000 | 0.07% |
| Middle East | 300,000 | N/A |
| Africa | 100,000 | 0.01% |
- Ultra-HNWIs (Ultra-HNWIs Account for 1.0% of All HNWIs) (more than $30 million, in 2006)
| UHNWIs (more than $30 million, in 2006) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Region | Number | Percentage of regional population |
| Global | 95,000 | 0.001% |
| North America | 38,400 | 0.007% |
| Europe | 23,200 | 0.003% |
| Asia-Pacific | 18,200 | 0.0004% |
| Latin America | 9,600 | 0.002% |
| Middle East | 3,300 | N/A |
| Africa | 2,000 | 0.00002% |
Scotland has more female millionaires than male.[citation needed]
There is a wide disparity in the estimates of the number of millionaires residing currently in the United States. According to TNS Financial Services, as reported by CNN money, 8.9 million households in the US alone had a net worth of at least $1 million excluding primary residences in 2005.[6] According to TNS, the number of millionnaires is now 9.3 million US households, with an increase of half a million since 2005. [7]
A report by Capgemini[8] for Merrill Lynch on the other hand stated that there are approximately 1,900,000 households in North America whose net worth exceeds 1 million US dollars (which include "private equity holdings stated at book value, ...publicly quoted equities, bonds, funds and cash deposits.. offshore investments are theoretically accounted for, but only insofar as countries are able to make accurate estimates.." as well as real estate not used for primary residences) (p. 30)).
These two very different numbers come from very different methodologies. TNS Financial Services uses household surveys and extrapolates the data from their sample across the entire US population. Merrill Lynch/Capgemini use macroeconomic analysis, estimating the total wealth of a country and its distribution among the population, and deriving from these estimates the number of high net worth individuals.
Great wealth and its consequences is a popular theme in fiction. The Millionaire was the title of a 1955 TV series about an unseen man of wealth who gave away $1,000,000 to a different person each episode, and a 1931 motion picture about a retired millionaire who buys a gas station to ease his boredom. Millionaire is also a common nickname of the international quiz show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, first hosted in the UK by Chris Tarrant, and later in the US by Regis Philbin and Meredith Vieira. Who Wants to Be a Super Millionaire also aired in the US, where contestants could win a total of $10,000,000. Many reality TV shows offer one million dollars as first prize.
Millionaire characters are also heavily used throughout entertainment programs. The heavy use of millionaire characters in televisions shows has led to the creation of stereotypes for persons whose net worth or wealth exceeds the amount of one million. Perhaps the most famous characterisations of millionaires on television shows and in movies are the evil businessman, the starlet, the ruthless lawyer and banker as well as the corrupt politician and their materialistic off-spring[citation needed]. These shows often portray their millionaire characters in a lifestyle of complete excess[citation needed], that is far out of reach for most net worth based millionaires in the US. It should also be noted that, as with most stereotypes, the millionaire stereotypes created by entertainment broadcasts and productions are not representative of the diverse population that reside in millionaire households[citation needed].
- Aggregate demand
- Billionaire
- Business oligarch
- Distribution of wealth
- High net worth individual
- Upper middle class
- Upper class
- Six figure income
- Wealth condensation
- Who Wants to be a Millionaire? (game show)
- The Millionaire Next Door
- Moscow Millionaire Fair
- ^ Marlys Harris. How to marry a billionaire. Money Magazine. June 21, 2007.
- ^ Worth $4 million--And Unable to Retire. Forbes.
- ^ In The Know: Are America's Rich Falling Behind The Super-Rich?. The Onion.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "World Wealth Report 2007."
- ^ http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/28/news/economy/millionaires/
- ^ http://sev.prnewswire.com/banking-financial-services/20070501/AQTU05201052007-1.htmlMillionaire households thus constituted roughly seven percent of all American households. The study also found that half of all millionaire households in the US were headed by retirees. Another finding was a record "33 percent increase over the 6.2 million households that met that criteria in 2003," fueled largely by the country's real estate boom.[http://money.cnn.com/2004/11/16/pf/millionaire_households/ Real Estate investments as the main source of growth among millionaire housholds, according to CNN Money.]
- '''[[#_ref-6|^]]''' {{PDFlink|[http://www.us.capgemini.com/DownloadLibrary/files/Capgemini_FSI_WWR06.pdf report by Merrill Lynch and Capgemini]|3.16 [[Mebibyte|MiB]]}}
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