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Britain's richest double their wealth in 10 years.

And David Cameron wants to give them even more money:rolleyes:

Crisis? What crisis? The 1,000 wealthiest people in the UK are now worth £547bn, not counting what’s in their bank accounts, according to the latest Sunday Times Rich List

The collective wealth of Britain’s richest people has more than doubled in the last 10 years, according to the Sunday Times Rich List.
This year’s list found the wealthiest 1,000 individuals and families now have a combined fortune of just over £547bn or £547m each on average.

The figure has more than doubled since a total of just under £250bn was recorded in 2005, despite the world economy being gripped by a punishing recession over much of the last decade.
Plain old millionaires increasingly struggle to count themselves among the mega-rich, with a fortune of £100m now required to make it into the top 1,000. That is £15m higher than last year’s minimum.


Back in 1997, it took a personal wealth of just £15m to make the grade.
The list, published on Sunday 26 April, includes 117 billionaires up from 104 last year. And 80 of these are based in London giving the capital more sterling billionaires than any other city in the world.
London-based Ukrainian businessman Len Blavatnik, whose empire includes the Warner Music Group, came top of the list thanks to his estimated fortune of £13.17bn.
He rose from fourth to first after his wealth rose by more than £3bn.
Blavatnik ousted brothers Sri and Gopi Hinduja from top spot. They were nudged into second, despite their fortune rising by £1.1bn to £13bn.
Galen and George Weston and family, who run a retail empire including Selfridges and Primark, enjoyed a particularly prosperous year with their wealth soaring by £3.7bn to £11bn.
Not all those in the top 25 have got richer, however.
Steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal’s fortune fell by £1.05bn to £9.2bn and Chelsea Football Club chairman Roman Abramovich’s total fell by £1.23bn to £7.29bn.
The list charts wealth including land, property, assets or significant shares but excludes bank accounts.


http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/apr/26/crisis-what-crisis-britains-richest-double-their-wealth-in-10-years?CMP=share_btn_fb
Reply 1
Britain's poorest are also better off than they were 10 years ago. Not to the same extent as the richest, certainly, but it's a far preferable situation to everyone being more equal but also worse off.

Posted from TSR Mobile
This includes 2005-2008, before the wheels came off and when everyone was still making crazy money for doing little, the Hindujas and Westons in particular operate in areas where they will have made a lot of money in that period.

I don't really understand why anyone wants that much money, but I don't have any objections to them amassing it if that's what they want to do.
The rich getting richer, who woulda thought it.
I`m sure there are many ordinary working families who have doubled their wealth in the last 10 years too.
Reply 6
David always takes from the poor and gives to the rich lmao.
Reply 7
My personal wealth has also increased, by a factor of more than fifty. What's your point?

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