The Freeman

Pinoys' wealth drops as inequality widens

- (Philstar.com)

MANILA — Filipinos' total wealth declined in 2017, according to a report by Credit Suisse that also shows slightly increasing wealth inequality in the country.

The Swiss bank's annual global wealth report revealed the Philippine­s' total wealth depleted to $593 billion in 2017, lower than 2016's $607 billion.

Credit Suisse uses three components to gauge wealth—financial assets (like stocks and bonds), non-financial assets (like property) and debt.

Based on the report's wealth estimates, financial assets owned by each adult in the country receded to $3,746 in mid-2017 from $3,971 last year. On the contrary, non-financial wealth per adult climbed to $6,485 from $6,354.

Debt per adult likewise surged to $458 from $447.

In terms of wealth distributi­on, only 0.1 percent of the Philippine­s' adult population have fortunes amounting to over $1 million. On the other hand, 86.6 percent of Filipino adults has wealth worth below $10,000.

This brought the country's Gini percentage — a commonly used measure of wealth inequality expressed as a number from 0 to 100, where a higher number indicates a more unequal distributi­on of wealth — to 83.9 percent, a tad higher than 2016's 83.4 percent.

Among high net worth individual­s here, only 12 Filipino adults have wealth reaching over $1 billion.

Population rise in the Philippine­s has also outpaced wealth growth, with the country's mean wealth per adult falling to $9,773 in 2017 from 2016's $9,878.

GLOBAL WEALTH

Meanwhile, in the year to mid-2017, total global wealth rose at a rate of 6.4 percent, the fastest pace since 2012 and reached $280 trillion, a gain of $16.7 trillion.

"This reflected widespread gains in equity markets matched by similar rises in non-financial assets, which moved above the pre-crisis year 2007's level for the first time this year," Credit Suisse said.

However, looking at the bottom of wealth distributi­on, 3.5 billion people — correspond­ing to 70 percent of all adults in the world — own less than $10,000, the Swiss bank reported.

The world's top 1 percent held 45.5 percent of all household wealth in 2000. Now, they hold 50.1 percent.

"Those with low wealth tend to be disproport­ionately found among the younger age groups, who have had little chance to accumulate assets, but we find that Millennial­s face particular­ly challengin­g circumstan­ces compared to other generation­s," the report said.

"While the bottom half of adults collective­ly own less than 1 percent of total wealth, the richest decile (top 10 percent of adults) owns 88 percent of global assets, and the top percentile alone accounts for half of total household wealth," it added.

The "Paradise Papers" leaks this month re-ignited heated debates over wealth inequality after it shed light on how some of the world's wealthiest shelter their fortune in tax havens.

The leaked documents reveal offshore interests, financial dealings and activities of politician­s and world leaders not privy to the wider public.

Some of the patterns have exposed tax engineerin­g and shopping sprees of major corporatio­ns around the world to reduce taxes in their home countries.

The Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, which released the database composed of 13.4 million files noted, however, that there are legitimate uses for offshore companies and trusts.

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