Examples of using Total wealth in English and their translations into Hebrew
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He now manages 7% of the world's total wealth.
Over 50% of Indonesia's total wealth is owned by 1% of the population.
These collectively own US$158.3 trillion or 44% of the global total wealth.
We call this your total wealth solution.
Credit Suisse has estimated that in 2014,the richest one percent held 48 percent of the world's total wealth.
Now let's show how the world's total wealth, roughly 223 trillion dollars is distributed.
In fact, the top 20 percent of ourpopulation own close to 90 percent of the total wealth in this country.
Total wealth” refers to the private wealth held by all the individuals living in each city.
(This is the case in most countries today.) Over 50% of Indonesia's total wealth is owned by 1% of the population.
For the purposes of the report,“total wealth” refers to the private wealth held by all the individuals living in each city.
The 250 million people who speak Portuguese represent approximately 3.7% of the world's population andaccount for about 4% of total wealth.
Total wealth" for the purposes of the report, refers to the total private wealth held by individuals living in each city.
A better fit between spending andpersonality was linked to life satisfaction more than total wealth or total spending.
If the current trend continues, the total wealth of Asian billionaires will overtake that of their counterparts in the US in four years.
The 16,000 families making up the richest 0.01%, with an average net worth of $371m,now control 11.2% of total wealth- back to the 1916 share, which is the highest on record….
Our forecasts suggest that total wealth among millionaire households will increase from $92 trillion in 2011 to $202 trillion by 2020, a growth of 119%.
From the beginning of the Depression until the end of the second world war,the middle class's share of total wealth rose steadily, thanks largely to collapsing wealth among richer households.
Between 2002 and 2010 the total wealth of the poorest half of the world in current U.S. dollars had been increasing more or less at the same rate as that of billionaires,” it said.
When the team further untangled the web of ownership, it found much of it tracked back to a"super-entity" of 147 even more tightly knit companies- all of their ownership was held by other members of the super-entity-that controlled 40 percent of the total wealth in the network.
The report shows that if the current trend continues, the total wealth of Asian billionaires will overtake that of their counterparts in the US in four years.
According to Oxfam,“From Nigeria to Bangladesh, from the U.K. to Brazil, people are fed up with feeling ignored by their political leaders, and millions are mobilizing to push for change.” Meanwhile, Russia was discovered to be the most unequal in the world simply because the richest1% of the country owns 74.5% of the country's total wealth, according to Credit Suisse.
Now, let's reduce the total wealth of the United States, which was roughly $54 trillion in 2009, to this symbolic pile of cash, and let's distribute it among our 100 Americans.
Increasing the wealth of society(production of goods as a constant increment of the total wealth of society, increment of intelligence as the development of the most important factor of the economy);
So today what you have is what I call the middle 40 percent, the people who are not in the top 10 and who are not in the bottom 50, and what you can view as the wealth middleclass that owns 20 to 30 percent of total wealth, national wealth, whereas they used to be poor, a century ago, when there was basically no wealth middle class.
So first, if you look at the level of wealth inequality, this is the share of total wealth going to the top 10 percent of wealth holders, so you can see the same kind of reversal between the U.S. and Europe that we had before for income inequality.
For only the second year in a decade, both the number of billionaires and their total wealth shrank, proving that even the wealthiest are not immune to economic forces and weak stock markets.
For the second year in this decade,the number of world billionaires and their total wealth reduced, which proves that even the wealthiest of people are not immune to economic forces and weak stock markets.
So the big difference today, wealth inequality is still very large, with 60,70 percent of total wealth for the top 10, but the good news is that it's actually better than one century ago, where you had 90 percent in Europe going to the top 10.