It says a lot that economists have created a new term โ โeveryday millionairesโ, or for short, EMILLIs โ to describe the rapidly growing number of people whose net wealth sits between $US1 million and $US5 million ($1.5 million and $7.7 million).
Of the 60 million EMILLIs worldwide, Australia boasts about 2 million people who own $US1 million or more, which stands to show that while in this cost-of-living crisis we may not feel economically lucky, relative to the rest of the world a lot of us definitely are.
Up, up, up on the wealth ladder: The number of Australian millionaires is growing. Credit: Harry Afentoglou
Given our adult population sits at roughly 21 million, about 10 per cent of us are millionaires in US dollar terms, according to the numbers contained in the UBS Global Wealth Report for 2024 published this week.
Looking at the investment bankโs global EMILLI rankings, Switzerland and Luxembourg sit at the top, with more than one in seven adults classified as a US dollar millionaire. A further four places on the planet have a ratio of one in 10: Hong Kong, Australia, the United States and the Netherlands.
EMILLIs may not live in mansions, drive Maseratis or jet off to the Maldives. Theyโre more likely the person driving by in his Lexus, the woman walking her Labrador at the park, or your next-door neighbour.
We sit around eighth in the world for the total number of US dollar millionaires, which includes EMILLIs and those even richer, behind the US, China, France, Japan, Germany, the UK and Canada. With their ranks swelling by more than 1000 a day last year, the US now counts nearly 24 million millionaires โ about 40 per cent of all millionaires around the world, and four times as many as the runner-up, China.
In terms of individual wealth, we punch well above our weight. Last year, Australiaโs median personal wealth grew by 11 per cent to $US268,000 ($413,500), ranking us second in the world on this measure. Luxembourg sits in the top spot. In terms of average wealth per adult, Australia came in fifth with $US516,000 ($796,000). Switzerland tops that list, ahead of the US, Hong Kong and Luxembourg.