Global Wealth in a Slow‑Motion World
It seems every time we thought we were sprinting ahead, the universe gave us a gentle nudge forward. From runaway inflation to slippery trade terms, economists have chalked up a chaos of factors that have cranked the GDP dial down like a broken turn‑stile. The result? Global wealth growth has slacked off in the last decade, citing a pitch‑black bar that’s only 4.5% now.
Decadal Dark‑Side: 2000‑2010 vs 2010‑2020
- Early 2000s “Gold Rush”: Average annual growth was a solid 7%.
- Late 2010s “Slow‑Mo”: Growth dropped to just 4%, essentially cutting the pace in half.
Thanks to the 2008 crisis, most nations saw a backlash. Conversely, the US and Hong Kong somehow managed to turn a few more pieces of this financial pizza.
Americans Roll Up Their Sleeves
- US growth climbs from 4% to 6% (talk about turning a crisis into a growth boost).
- Hong Kong uphill climb of 1% thanks to a surge in real estate fortunes.
Rising Tide? Or Tiny Ripples?
While the US and Hong Kong rose a little, most territories lain flat or slid. Let’s crunch some numbers:
- China & India
- China: 19% → 8%.
- India: 14% → 7%.
- Russia
- From 20% to a mere 4%.
- Australia, UAE, Brazil
- Annual growth slashed by two‑thirds.
- Germany
- Decade‑over‑decade: 6% → 3%.
- United Kingdom
- Only a 1% slide away from the deceleration.
- Spain & Italy
- From 12% & 7% down to 0%.
- Greece & Japan
- Worsened to a -2% (a full reversal!).
What’s Feeding the Lag?
Demographic doom is a big culprit, especially for aging, shrinking societies like Italy & Japan. Other villains include trade frictions, sky‑high interest rates, and all the ball‑in‑hand crises that have turned wealth growth into a treadmill that hardly reaches the finish line.
Takeaway? Global wealth’s treadmill is still moving, but we’re all running a few steps slower. So, grab a coffee, stay hydrated, and let’s keep chasing those numbers—one small leap at a time.
