USA TODAY US Edition

Bezos, Gates, Buffett top ‘Billionair­e Bonanza’

- Kevin McCoy

The very rich really are very different from you and me, as author F. Scott Fitzgerald famously wrote. How different? A new report breaks it down by the financial numbers.

The three richest billionair­es in the U.S., as measured by the annual Forbes 400 ranking, now own more wealth than the bottom half of the nation’s population combined, according to the report by the Institute for Policy Studies, a research organizati­on focused on inequality issues.

The top trio

The fortunate three are Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and financier and investor Warren Buffett. Their $264.1 billion in holdings outstrips the combined net worth of an estimated 160 million people, or 53 million U.S. households, according to the report titled: “Billionair­e Bonanza 2017.”

The full billionair­e ranking

Expanding the comparison to all billionair­es who comprise the full Forbes 400 list, the report said the group collective­ly has more wealth than the bottom 64% of the U.S. population. The percentage represents roughly 80 million U.S. households, or 204 million people — more than the combined population­s of Canada and Mexico.

The wealthiest group includes such well-known names as Facebook cofounder Mark Zuckerberg, Google cofounder Sergey Brin and President Trump, who took a tumble in this year’s ranking.

Bezos in July tweeted a call for recommenda­tions about philanthro­py efforts he could help fund “right now.” Gates, Buffett, Zuckerberg and others on the list have been major charitable funders and have pledged to give away much of their fortunes.

Income inequality

The median American family has far less wealth — a net worth of $80,000, excluding the family car — the report said, citing data drawn from the latest edition of the triannual Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances.

However, many Americans fare far worse financiall­y amid a growth in U.S. income disparity. One in five U.S. households, more than 19%, have zero or negative net worth, the Institute for Policy Studies report found. More than 30% of African-American households and 27% of Latino households have zero or negative net worth, the report said.

“So much money concentrat­ing in so few hands while so many people struggle is not just bad economics, it’s a moral crisis,” said Josh Hoxie, the report’s co-author. Federal tax reform proposals being drafted and discussed on Capitol Hill could expand the current wealth divide, the report warned.

Changes that could reverse the disparity and promote income equality include setting higher marginal tax rates on income higher than $250,000 and taxing capital gains income at ordinary income tax rates, the report said. Federal lawmakers should also close the so-called carried interest loophole that enables hedge fund managers to pay lower taxes, as well as strengthen and expand the estate tax, the report said.

 ??  ?? Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett
 ??  ?? Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos
 ??  ?? Bill Gates
Bill Gates

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