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Wealth level remains high in Taiwan: Credit Suisse report

November 25, 2016
Taipei 101 towers above many other structures in the Asia-Pacific, much like Taiwan’s average level of wealth as revealed in the World Wealth Report 2016 compiled by Credit Suisse Research Institute. (Courtesy of Taipei 101)

Taiwan’s average level of wealth per adult is estimated at US$172,847, well above that of most countries in the Asia-Pacific and similar to that of Western Europe, according to the Global Wealth Report 2016 released Nov. 23 by Credit Suisse Research Institute.

The seventh annual survey of 215 countries puts Taiwan ahead of the Asia-Pacific average of US$46,325 and global mean of US$52,819. As an “Asian Tiger,” the nation is categorized as a high-income economy with “satisfactory” wealth data quality.

But the result is down 5.4 percent from last year, a trend attributed by the CSRI to falls in Taiwan’s market capitalization, housing price index and exchange rate of 10.5 percent, 4.7 percent and 4.4 percent, respectively.

Despite the decline, the result still represents growth of 59 percent from US$108,600 in 2000, or 95 percent using constant exchange rates during the 16-year period. In addition, the report found Taiwan’s national wealth of US$3.2 trillion accounts for 1.3 percent of the worldwide total.

A breakdown of Taiwan’s wealth portfolio reveals that financial assets comprise 64 percent of the net total. CSRI chalks this up to the country’s high savings rate and well-developed financial institutions. Debt is relatively low at US$26,629 per adult, or 13 percent of gross assets.

The report also highlights Taiwan’s moderate wealth disparity in a year marked by increased economic inequality in major economies around the world. A total 38 percent of adults possess over US$100,000 in wealth and 20 percent less than US$10,000. In comparison, the global averages are 8 percent and 73 percent, respectively.

A large number of adults in Taiwan with high wealth reflects high mean wealth, rather than high wealth inequality, the CSRI said, adding that the country’s wealth Gini coefficient—a measurement of inequality among income brackets with 100 percent the most extreme—stands at 74 percent, one of the lowest among emerging market economies.

Taiwan also has 356,000 U.S. dollar millionaires, down from 414,000 the year before, the report found, with the figure expected to hit 489,000 in 2021. (SFC-E)

Write to Taiwan Today at ttonline@mofa.gov.tw

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