By Steve Roth Originally Published at Wealth Economics Wealth concentration got just a tiny bit less extreme. The bottom 50% of American wealth holders got richer in the last three years: in 2021, ’22, and ’23 — not just in absolute dollar terms, but relative to richer folks. The percentage growth was faster than it was for wealthier groups, so wealth inequality went down — but only by a smidge. The first thing to know is that the Bottom 50 start 2021 with a pretty tiny slice and share of total assets: .8T, 5.6% of households’ 0T total. End of 2023, they’ve got .6T, 5.8% of the total.1 A welcome development, but not exactly a massive shift in wealth inequality. But still, the Bottom 50% is a bit better off, in both relative and
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by Steve Roth
Originally Published at Wealth Economics
Wealth concentration got just a tiny bit less extreme.
The bottom 50% of American wealth holders got richer in the last three years: in 2021, ’22, and ’23 — not just in absolute dollar terms, but relative to richer folks. The percentage growth was faster than it was for wealthier groups, so wealth inequality went down — but only by a smidge.
The first thing to know is that the Bottom 50 start 2021 with a pretty tiny slice and share of total assets: $7.8T, 5.6% of households’ $140T total. End of 2023, they’ve got $9.6T, 5.8% of the total.1 A welcome development, but not exactly a massive shift in wealth inequality.
But still, the Bottom 50% is a bit better off, in both relative and absolute terms. Where did that wealth come from? What kind of assets did the bottom 50% accumulate? Here you go:
Start with the righthand column. 84% of the total asset increase came from real estate and consumer durables (mostly vehicles). Stock-market holdings (in Other) are a nothingburger for the bottom half of Americans.
Real estate is easy to explain; real-estate prices went up. So the bottom-50%ers who owned their homes got richer. I don’t know what percent of bottom-50% wealthholders own their homes, but I’m guessing it’s a low number. (Help from my gentle readers much appreciated; I’ll update this.) If I’m correct, a big percentage of the Bottom-50 group received no benefit at all from that.
The bottom-50% renters are actually worse off, if they aspire to be homeowners.
Durable goods requires a bit more explanation. What happened: people bought lots of new cars, trucks, and other durables. So their durable-asset holdings increased. This is not “free magic money” like real-estate holding gains, which just…happen.
Now you might say that the money to buy all those durables came from the stimulus checks, and from the covid Child Tax Credit expansion (all blessings on its brief life, and curses on its hasty demise at the hands of Republican congresscritters). Accept that and fine, sure, those durables came from “free money” as well.
But in any case, the much-heralded and certainly welcome bottom-50% en-wealthification was miniscule in both absolute and relative terms. And it was heavily skewed toward the (wealthier) homeowners in that group.
1 All the numbers here are from the Distributional Financial Accounts.