‘Chinese middle class is the world’s largest’
ZURICH: China’s middle class has overtaken the United States to become the world’s largest, Credit Suisse said on Tuesday in its latest report on global wealth. Asia will be the scene for the greatest expansion of the world’s middle class, it predicted. The Swiss bank said with 109 million adults
By our correspondents
October 14, 2015
ZURICH: China’s middle class has overtaken the United States to become the world’s largest, Credit Suisse said on Tuesday in its latest report on global wealth.
Asia will be the scene for the greatest expansion of the world’s middle class, it predicted.
The Swiss bank said with 109 million adults "this year, the Chinese middle class for the first time outnumbered" that in the United States at 92 million.
While the number of middle class worldwide grew last year at a slower pace than the wealthy, it "will continue to expand in emerging economies overall, with a lion’s share of that growth to occur in Asia," Credit Suisse chief executive Tidjane Thiam said in a statement accompanying the bank’s annual Global Wealth Report.
"As a result, we will see changing consumption patterns as well as societal changes as, historically, the middle class has acted as an agent of stability and prosperity," he added.
The report said size and wealth of the middle class was a key factor in economic development, and the middle class was often at the heart of political movements and new consumption trends.
The report used a floor for the middle class as having wealth double the annual medium income for their country.
While wealth may still be mostly concentrated in Europe and the United States, Thiam said "the growth of wealth in emerging markets has been most impressive, including a fivefold rise in China since the beginning of the century."
China now accounts for a fifth of the world population, while holding nearly 10 percent of the global wealth.
Overall, the report found that global wealth fell by nearly 5 percent in the year to mid-2015 to $250 trillion due a strengthening of the US dollar in which income is compared.
However if currency effects are stipped out, wealth continued to expand at the trend rate since the beginning of the century.
Asia will be the scene for the greatest expansion of the world’s middle class, it predicted.
The Swiss bank said with 109 million adults "this year, the Chinese middle class for the first time outnumbered" that in the United States at 92 million.
While the number of middle class worldwide grew last year at a slower pace than the wealthy, it "will continue to expand in emerging economies overall, with a lion’s share of that growth to occur in Asia," Credit Suisse chief executive Tidjane Thiam said in a statement accompanying the bank’s annual Global Wealth Report.
"As a result, we will see changing consumption patterns as well as societal changes as, historically, the middle class has acted as an agent of stability and prosperity," he added.
The report said size and wealth of the middle class was a key factor in economic development, and the middle class was often at the heart of political movements and new consumption trends.
The report used a floor for the middle class as having wealth double the annual medium income for their country.
While wealth may still be mostly concentrated in Europe and the United States, Thiam said "the growth of wealth in emerging markets has been most impressive, including a fivefold rise in China since the beginning of the century."
China now accounts for a fifth of the world population, while holding nearly 10 percent of the global wealth.
Overall, the report found that global wealth fell by nearly 5 percent in the year to mid-2015 to $250 trillion due a strengthening of the US dollar in which income is compared.
However if currency effects are stipped out, wealth continued to expand at the trend rate since the beginning of the century.
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