While many might be feeling economic forces pressing down on their lives, getting deeper in debt and closer to poverty, the ultra rich are feeling the opposite. 2017 is a record setting year for the billionaires of the world, as they made more money that any other previously recorded year in history. Their wealth increased by 20%, according to a report by the UBS, the famous Swiss bank, alongside the tax accounting firm PwC.

Famous names like the Rothschilds, Rockefellers and Vanderbilts who are known for their massive wealth, and have their part to play in many conspiratorial accounts of shaping of human history in the past few hundred years. They controlled most of the wealth in the past 20th century, but now there are more people and families joining the ranks of the super wealthy. There is so much money in hands of these upper tier ultra-rich that they will create a "new wave of rich and powerful multi-generational families".

In Section 3 titled "Managing family wealth in the 21st century", is says:

The past 30 years have seen far greater wealth creation e Gilded Age of the late 19th Century. That period bred generations of families in the US and Europe who went on to influence business, banking, politics, philanthropy and the arts for more than 100 years. With wealth from entrepreneurs to their heirs in the coming years, the 21st century multigenerational families are being created.

In 2013, there was a total of 1,512 billionaires in the world, totaling a total wealth of $6.3 trillion. This increased to 1,751, to 1,760, to 1,979 in 2014, 2015 and 2016 respectively, and finally to 2,158 in 2017 with a total wealth of $8.9 trillion and an increase of $1.4 trillion from the previous year. That's a larger growth for the ultra rich than the whole GDP of Spain or Australia.

This is what billionaire distribution looks like per region:

Over 40 of the 179 new billionaires got that way from inheriting their wealth. Many billionaires are over 70, which the report expects to generate more inherited billionaires in the next 20 years as approximately $3.4 trillion is to be handed down to them.

A major wealth transition has begun. Over the past five years (2012–2017), the sum passed by deceased billionaires to beneficiaries has grown by an average of 17% each year, to reach USD 117 billion in 2017. In that year alone, 44 heirs inherited more than a billion dollars each (56% Americas, 28% EMEA, 16% APAC), totaling USD 189 billion.

Over the next two decades we expect a wealth transition of USD 3.4 trillion worldwide – almost 40% of current total billionaire wealth. The calculation is simple. There are 701 billionaires over the age of 70, whose wealth will transition to heirs and philanthropy over the next 20 years, given the statistical probability of average life expectancy.

The 30 richest billionaires over 70 years old have a combined net worth of over $1 trillion. David Rockefeller died last year at 101 with a fortune of $3.3 billion. He was the last grandchild alive from the founding fortunes made by John D. Rockefeller and his Standard Oil company that made him the world's first billionaire.

Families are getting wealthier, where the old adage is less of a reality:

From family businesses to business families

They say that the first generation makes it; the second generation preserves it; the third generation squanders it. Yet the cliché no longer appears to be appropriate. As we work with our billionaire clients, many of the next generation seem highly motivated, committed to their chosen careers, the family business and/or doing social good. For sure, there are exceptions, but there is a tendency for the next generation to approach the responsibility of wealth extremely seriously, even becoming entrepreneurs in their own right.

Apparently, keeping the family business alive matters to keep the wealth going for themselves and future generations:

Business families are emerging, not just family businesses. The family business is a good nursery for entrepreneurs. Of those multigenerational billionaires who inherit a family business, almost two thirds (62%) then start entrepreneurial ventures themselves. By comparison, only 42% of those who inherit assets do so.

Most of the ultra rich are in the U.S., but there are a growing number in China. China has only 16 billionaires 12 years ago, while in 2017 that has risen to 373. This means that for every 5 billionaires int he world, 1 of them is Chinese. The growth in China is fueling the rise of more billionaires.

Ont he other hand, a report in June by Philip Alston, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights, says 18.5 million Americans live in extreme poverty, with 5.3 million living in conditions of absolute poverty that are akin to a Third World country. While the gulf between the rich and poor grow, the world burns for many and the ultra rich few grow further in their monetary dominance and excess.

What do you think of all of this? It's just fair play? Just honest working people who make money by making the world better? I think it's more nuanced than that. We are living in an age of money-magic number-manipulating games and gambling. They play around with money, and sure some lose money, but some make a lot of it, and all it is, is high-stakes gambling, like the stock market for one, or worse yet, with collateral debt obligations (CDO) and the laughable derivatives market and bubble.

The derivatives bubble is at over $500 trillion. The GDP of the planet, called the GWP, was estimated to be at around $107.5 trillion in 2014. Many of the ultra rich have been playing games with money, number-magic, in unreal schemes. And when their tricks pop, the world blows up in economic crises.

We only saw the tip of their financial misdeeds in the 2008-2009 crash. There is a lot more pain ahead for the rest of us in the future. Expect more people to become poor in the next big crash that was engineered by many of rich fraudsters of the world. Each time this happens, more wealth is transfered from those who have less money to those who have more money, further widening the gap of wealth inequality.

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