20 Countries with Best Distribution of Wealth

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In this article, we will discuss the 20 countries with the best distribution of wealth. If you want to skip the detailed analysis, click 5 Countries with Best Distribution of Wealth.

The distribution of wealth is a comparison of wealth among various people within a society or population. In wealth distribution, the focus is more on the assets of individuals or households rather than income. Subtracting liabilities from assets equals net worth or wealth. Economic factors including growth, interest rate, inflation, and government policies play a major role in the wealth distribution of a society. The majority of the global wealth is held by high-net-worth individuals. 

Global Wealth Distribution

In 2022, the world’s millionaires held nearly half of net household wealth. On January 16, Oxfam reported that the richest 1% took away almost two-thirds of all new wealth worth $42 trillion generated since 2020. In the past decade, the richest 1% have gathered nearly half of all new wealth. Decades of low interest rates led equities and real estate values to soar, and a large portion is held among the world’s wealthiest. However, in 2022, there was a sharp rise in interest rates and higher inflation led to a decrease in the fortune of the richest. 

According to the Global Wealth Report 2023, the total net private wealth dropped to $454.4 trillion in 2022, plunging by $11.3 trillion from 2021. While wealth per adult fell by $3,198 to $84,718 per adult in 2022. The decline is mainly driven by the appreciation of the US dollar against foreign currencies. This marks the slowest increase of wealth at a constant exchange rate since 2008. 

The region that saw the highest growth in wealth in 2022 was Latin America with a total wealth increase of $2.4 trillion, an average 6% currency appreciation against the US dollar. Countries with the largest wealth rise included Russia, Mexico, India, and Brazil. The regions that were affected the most were North America and Europe, where the total wealth plunged by $10.9 trillion. Asia Pacific's wealth loss was about $2.1 trillion. The United States, Japan, China, Canada, and Australia had the highest wealth loss in 2022.  

The brighter part of 2022 was a decrease in wealth inequalities. According to the Global Wealth Report 2023, overall wealth inequality fell in 2022 with the wealth share of the global 1% dropping to 44.5%. The global millionaires dropped by 3.5 million during 2022 to 59.4 million people. Global median wealth rose by 3% in 2022, which is a meaningful metric that reflects how the typical person is faring.