Wealth distribution in Europe

Wealth is the total sum value of monetary assets and valuable material possessions owned by an individual, minus private debt, at a set point in time.

There is a difference between median and mean wealth. Median wealth is the amount that divides the wealth distribution into two equal groups: half the adults have wealth above the median, and the other half below. Mean wealth is the amount obtained by dividing the total aggregate wealth by the number of adults. In nations where wealth is highly concentrated in a small percentage of people, the mean can be much higher than the median.

A Global Wealth Report is published annually by Credit Suisse.[1][2] This article shows the distribution of wealth in Europe.

2021 edit

* indicates "Income in COUNTRY" or "Economy of COUNTRY" links.

Mean wealth per adult in Europe in USD (2021)
Mean and median wealth per adult, in US dollars, Wealth Gini. (2021 publication).[1]
Country or subnational area Mean Median Gini Adults
  Switzerland *   673,962 146,733 78.1 6,958,000
  Luxembourg *   477,306 259,899 67.0 498,000
  Netherlands *   377,090 136,110 75.3 13,462,000
  Denmark *   376,069 165,622 73.6 4,557,000
  Belgium *   351,330 230,550 60.3 8,993,000
  Iceland *   337,787 231,462 50.9 255,000
  Sweden *   336,166 89,846 87.2 7,794,000
  France *   299,355 133,559 70.0 49,967,000
  United Kingdom * 290,724 131,522 71.7 52,568,000
  Austria *   290,348 91,833 74.5 7,271,000
  Norway *   275,880 117,798 78.5 4,184,000
  Germany *   268,681 65,374 77.9 68,015,000
  Ireland *   266,150 99,030 80.0 3,619,000
  Italy *   239,244 118,885 66.5 49,746,000
  Spain *   227,122 105,831 69.2 37,798,000
  Finland *   167,711 73,775 74.0 4,373,000
  Malta *   148,934 84,390 61.7 358,000
  Portugal *   142,537 61,306 70.5 8,339,000
  Cyprus *   142,304 35,300 80.7 679,000
  Slovenia *   120,173 63,961 67.1 1,672,000
  Greece *   104,603 57,595 65.7 8,462,000
  Czech Republic *   78,559 23,794 77.7 8,528,000
  Estonia *   77,817 38,901 73.8 1,044,000
  Latvia *   70,454 33,884 80.9 1,477,000
  Croatia *   69,140 34,945 68.5 3,303,000
  Slovakia *   68,059 45,853 50.3 4,346,000
  Poland *   67,477 23,550 70.7 30,315,000
  Lithuania *   63,500 29,679 71.0 2,166,000
  Montenegro * 60,310 30,739 68.4 476,000
  Hungary *   53,664 24,126 66.5 7,708,000
  Romania *   50,009 23,675 70.1 7,769,000
  Bulgaria *   36,443 17,403 70.1 5,586,000
  Serbia * 31,705 14,954 70.6 5,480,000
  Bosnia and Herzegovina * 30,597 15,283 68.6 2,637,000
  Albania * 30,524 15,363 68.2 2,187,000
  Turkey * 27,466 8,001 81.8 57,768,000
  Russia *   27,162 5,431 87.8 111,845,000
  Belarus *   23,278 12,168 66.7 7,367,000
  Armenia *   22,538 9,441 73.0 2,176,000
  Moldova * 15,491 7,577 69.4 3,188,000
  Georgia * 14,162 4,223 81.3 2,959,000
  Ukraine * 13,104 2,529 84.4 34,639,000
  Azerbaijan * 11,926 5,022 72.7 7,155,000

For several European countries, Credit Suisse could only provide rough estimates of mean wealth, with no information about the distribution of said wealth, citing poor data quality.[3]

* indicates "Income in COUNTRY or TERRITORY" or "Economy of COUNTRY or TERRITORY" links.

Mean wealth per adult, in US dollars.
(2021 publication).[3]
Country or subnational area Mean
  Monaco * 998,694
  Liechtenstein * 919,820
  Andorra * 273,862
  Greenland * 207,714
  San Marino * 196,188
  North Macedonia * 51,788
  Kosovo * 46,087

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Global Wealth Databook 2021" (PDF). Credit Suisse. Retrieved June 24, 2021. Full data, including mean and median wealth, gini coefficient and number of adults for all countries on pages 115-118.
  2. ^ "Global Wealth Report 2021". Credit Suisse. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Global Wealth Databook 2021" (PDF). Credit Suisse. Retrieved June 24, 2021. Page 5 mentions "26 countries for which it is difficult to estimate either the level of household wealth or the distribution of wealth, or both". Pages 21-24 then feature estimates for mean wealth per adult for said countries, with wealth data quality characterized as "poor" or "n.a.".

External links edit