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The Rich Get Richer: The Forbes 400Born On Home Plate
According to a yearly study published by United
for a Fair Economy (UFE), a Boston think tank, not only are the
rich getting richer at the expense of the classes below them, but
the pace is accelerating.
For instance, Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates, the richest
American, doubled his wealth last year to a net worth of almost
$40 billion. Some people find his rapid increase in riches so
fascinating that theres a web site you can visit titled the
Bill Gates Wealth Clock.
Each year UFE releases its survey, Born on Third Base: The
Sources of Wealth of the Forbes 400, to coincide with the
World Series and employs baseball language to assess the status
of the very rich. Their data tracks the financial and
biographical origins of the 400 richest individuals and families
listed in the October issue of Forbes Magazine.
Forbes celebrates what they call the bootstrapers, the
Horatio Alger stories. says Charles Collins, co-director of
UFE, We thought it would be interesting to look at who
inherited their way onto the list or had a wealthy head
start.
He adds sarcastically that the key to great riches is choosing
wealthy parents or grandparents. Two-thirds of those on the
Forbes list, according to Collins, started with at least some
substantial start-up capital, and 42 percent inherited enough
wealth (Born on Home Plate) to rank in the 400 at birth.
Being Born on First, Second or Third Base, according to the
study, means the individual began with considerable income or
family assistance.
Less than a third actually did the rags to riches route, and are
considered by UFE to have Started in the Batters Box.
The current Forbes poll shows that entry to the coveted circle
has become more costly. Last year you needed $415 million to make
the list; thats increased this time to a net worth of $475
million. Also, the number of billionaires jumped from 135 to 170,
and the average net worth of the wealthiest 400 individuals
increased by almost a third from $478 million in 1996 to $623.9
million this year.
Collins finds it troubling that high side money is increasing
while an increasing number of Americans have stagnating incomes,
declining savings and limited retirement options. The
reality is that the American economy has not worked that well for
the average person in the last twenty years, he says.
Certainly not like it has for the rich.
Census data confirms that trend. The top 5 percent of the
population holds 60 percent of the nations net worth while
the rest of us split up the remainder.
The result of this increasing disparity is reported in another
recent study, Hunger in a Global Economy: Hunger
1998, released by the Washington, D.C.-based Bread for the
World Institute, showing the U.S. with the highest wage
inequality of any industrialized nation.
According to David Beckmann, president of the food advocacy
group, 4 million U.S. households suffer from moderate to severe
hunger including many in [YOUR STATE INSERTED]. Their 130-page
study cites an increase between 1991 and 1993 of [ADD STAT]
percent to almost [ADD STAT] percent of the states children
who are hungry or at risk.
We sat by quietly, says Beckmann, referring to last
years budget debate, while federal efforts to reduce
poverty and hunger have been dramatically scaled back. The only
thing that got cut were programs affecting poor people.
Bread for the World is urging the U.S. Congress to pass the
Hunger Has A Cure bill which would fund nutrition programs that
were previously cut or eliminated.
Collins UFE also wants a change. For the past twenty
years, he says, American workers have stepped up to
the plate and hit sacrifice flies so our nations rich can
score.
Its time to correct the imbalance.Peter
Werbe
The UFE study is available from 37 Temple Place, 5th Flr., Boston
MA 02111; 617-423-2148; or at www.stg.org. The hunger report from
1100 Wayne Ave., Suite 1000, Silver Spring MD 20910;
301-608-2400; or at www.bread.org.
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Last modified: December 11, 1997