[Grovenet] So, are you better off than 8 years ago!!!

Steele, Mike steelem at pacificu.edu
Fri Aug 29 10:44:25 PDT 2008


Ha!!  Hit the wrong key...haven't done that in years.  Apologies.

--Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: grovenet-bounces at rdrop.com [mailto:grovenet-bounces at rdrop.com] On
Behalf Of Steele, Mike
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 10:43 AM
To: Forest Grove local interests list
Subject: Re: [Grovenet] So, are you better off than 8 years ago!!!

Have a good one!  

 

Wanna do something a little special this weekend? A movie?  Let me BBQ
something?  Or do one of my six fabulous bachelor dinners?

 

Love,

 

--M

 

________________________________

From: grovenet-bounces at rdrop.com [mailto:grovenet-bounces at rdrop.com] On
Behalf Of Bob Browning
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 10:39 AM
To: Grovenet
Subject: [Grovenet] So, are you better off than 8 years ago!!!

 


The Ranks of the Ultrawealthy Grow


by Tom Herman
Thursday, August 28, 2008
provided by  <http://www.wsj.com/> 

One of the most exclusive clubs in the U.S. has picked up more members.

About 47,000 people had a net worth of $20 million or more in 2004, the
latest available year, according to new estimates by the Internal
Revenue Service. While that was up only slightly from 46,000 in 2001, it
was up 62% from 29,000 in 1998.

The IRS also reported increases in the number of people with a net worth
between $10 million and $20 million: 79,000 people qualified for this
group in 2004, up from 77,000 in 2001 and 51,000 in 1998.

California had the largest number of residents with a net worth of $1.5
million or more, with 428,000 in 2004. Florida came in second, with
199,000, followed by New York (168,000), Texas (108,000), Illinois
(101,000), Pennsylvania (86,000) and Massachusetts (83,000). 

This new peek inside the nation's upper crust comes from IRS data posted
recently on the agency's Web site (irs.gov <http://irs.gov/> ). While
nobody knows precisely how many millionaires or multimillionaires there
are, the IRS figures are considered an important indicator since they're
based on federal estate-tax returns, which include extensive details on
assets and debts of wealthy people who have died. IRS analysts use data
on these returns to estimate the wealth of the living.

The IRS numbers also provide additional insights into wealth in the U.S.
beyond what has already been reported in several other studies. Among
them was a Federal Reserve Board survey of consumer finances, which
focuses on households and was published in 2006. The Fed and IRS data
are helpful when read together, says James Poterba, professor of
economics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and president of the
National Bureau of Economic Research, the nonprofit research
organization best known for tracking the U.S. business cycle. Both sets
of data "provide important information," Mr. Poterba says. "They appear
to track broadly similar trends in wealth distribution -- but they
provide somewhat different perspectives."

 Separate IRS data, released earlier this year, showed the nation's top
400 taxpayers by income reported total income of $85.6 billion on their
federal income-tax returns for 2005 -- an average of nearly $214 million
apiece. Just to make the cutoff to be eligible for this group of 400
required income of at least $100.3 million, up from $74.5 million for
2004. Joel Slemrod, professor of economics at the Ross School of
Business of the University of Michigan, dubbed this group "the Fortunate
400."

Some of the IRS's new personal-wealth numbers aren't directly comparable
with those in its previous studies because analysts used different
net-worth ranges at the lower end. But the top three groups -- starting
with a net worth of $5 million -- are the same in these and several
previous IRS reports by the Statistics of Income Division. Among the
findings in the latest report, which isn't adjusted for inflation:

 

The total net worth of the 47,000 people in the $20 million-or-more
category totaled $2.591 trillion in 2004. That was down from $2.756
trillion held by the top group in 2001 but up sharply from the
approximately $1.5 trillion held by those in the top group in 1998.

About 231,000 people had a net worth between $5 million and $10 million
in 2004. That was down slightly from 243,000 in 2001.

Of the total income for the $20 million or more group, the biggest
single asset category by far was publicly traded stock ($719.28
billion). In second place was closely held stock.

The IRS figures underscore the importance of stock and other business
assets for those in the highest echelons of the super rich, says Mr.
Poterba of MIT and the National Bureau of Economic Research.

* Email: taxreport at wsj.com

Copyrighted, Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved.

 




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