The Global Wealth Report 2024 was released on July 10 by the Swiss bank UBS, highlighting where wealth inequalities have grown the furthest. South Africa comes top of the list, scoring 82 out of 100 on the inequality index, where 0 indicates total equality and 100 indicates absolute inequality, Statista reports.
This is a jump of 17.7% since 2008. Other countries with particularly high scores were Brazil (81), the United Arab Emirates (77), Saudi Arabia (77) and Sweden (77). Even Japan, which at 54 scored the lowest figure of the markets analysed, is still far from equal.
The gap on inequality has closed slightly in North America since 2008, with the United States recording a decrease of 2.4% in that time frame. Inequality has widened in Latin America and much of Eastern Europe and Asia though.
This is shown on the chart, with Brazil seeing a wealth increase in inequality of 16.8% and Mexico a rise of 6.5%, as India saw an increase of 16.2%, Singapore of 22.9%, Indonesia of 15.1%, China of 7.4% and Japan of 9.4%. South Korea and Hong Kong buck the regional trend, with decreases of 8.1% and 5.9%, respectively.
According to UBS, while inequality is increasing in fast-growing markets, the opposite is true in a number of mature economies, where middle wealth segments are outpacing the pace of growth of higher wealth brackets.
While the Gini index is a useful tool for comparing inequality across different markets, it is important to take the measure of absolute wealth into consideration too.
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