China had four million
millionaire households in 2014, the second-highest in the world after the
United States, a survey shows ©Frederic J. Brown (AFP)
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China had four million millionaire households in 2014, the
second-highest in the world after the United States, as the country's stock
market boom boosted private wealth, an independent survey showed Tuesday.
One million new
millionaires were created in the country last year, the highest increase among
all nations, US-based research firm Boston Consulting Group (BCG) said in a
report.
The United States had
seven million millionaire households last year, the most in the world. Japan
took third place with one million, according to the report.
AFP report continues:
Growth in private wealth
in China was driven mainly by investments in local equities, it said.
The benchmark Shanghai
Composite Index finished 2014 as the best performer in Asia after soaring more
than 50 percent.
"Strong market
performance across the entire (Asia-Pacific excluding Japan) region -- thanks
to solid domestic demand -- significantly increased the value of existing
assets... compared with the increase stemming from newly created wealth,"
the report said.
The rise in the value of
existing assets accounted for 76 percent of the region's growth in private
wealth, it added.
China had 1,037
households with more than US$100 million in net worth, around one fifth of the
United States' 5,201 but the second-largest in the world, the report said.
Forbes said in an April
report that mainland China was estimated to have a record 400 billionaires and
billionaire families thanks to "a rally in stock prices".
A yawning income gap has
become a rising concern in the world's most populous country, where the
official Gini coefficient stood at 0.469 last year.
The figure is a commonly
used measure of income inequality, with 0 representing perfect equality and 1
total inequality. Some academics view 0.40 as a warning signal.
Analysts say that official
corruption connected with government control of the economy, the state monopoly
of some industries and a lack of social security for migrant workers are among
reasons for the country's income imbalance, according to a report earlier this
year by the People's Daily, the ruling Communist Party mouth-piece.
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