typical US family's net worth: $93,100

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by richardyu301, Feb 24, 2006.

  1. balda

    balda

  2. Belgium.

    The figures were published by the National Bank of Belgium.
     
    #32     May 14, 2006
  3. bl33p

    bl33p

    It would be helpful if you could find out the median net worth as it can be a significantly different value than average due to the way how wealth is often stacked to a very small rich minority.

    For example, if there are 9 people with net worth 1000 and 1 with 1 billion, their average net worth is approx. 100 million but their median net worth is 1000. Average is highly misleading, no?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median
     
    #33     May 14, 2006
  4. gnome

    gnome

    With 100 Million or so samples in the US, seems that average and median are close to the same. However as I was wrong once before, I could be again.
     
    #34     May 14, 2006
  5. But where do you draw the line in terms of liquidity? E.g., If I have $4M in long-term GICs (or as you americans call them, CDs) I can't touch the capital. It's guaranteed interest though but it's totally illiquid.

    But yea, I can't understand including houses (other than to pad the figure and swell the ego :D ) because great, your house is worth $800K. Sell it and have 800K........but you have nowhere to live now, lol.
     
    #35     May 14, 2006
  6. I'm having a huge amount of trouble finding these... could you send me a link? I found the GDP per capita that was updated in 2005 that said that the average GDP per capita was $31900

    http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/fields/2004.html

    and I'm trying to imagine a situation where either a) Everyone owns their own homes b) people just can't think of anything to do with their money but save it, c) Families are HUGE or d) the rules for passing on prior generations wealth are not restrictive at all... or any of these in combination with another. A median family net worth of 385000, with 2 people earning wages within the home, would take over 6 years of spending NO money and getting charged NO taxes to build if you ignore interest... obviously this makes things rediculous, but it approximately conveys what a daunting task it would be. This might just strike me as odd because of a difference in cultural perspective, but I'd be really interested in seeing those statistics that you mentioned.

    Edited. I messed up the calculation and corrected it... still seems crazy to me.
     
    #36     May 14, 2006
  7. 93k? That's pathetic! Does that include retirement savings? I hope not. I am not bragging, nor am I near 1 mil yet, but 93k ain't much IMO. Heck a major medical claim could wipe that out in the blink of an eye.

    That's a sad commentary on the consumer driven US society.
     
    #37     May 14, 2006
  8. spike500

    Am I looking at the right website?

    http://www.nbb.be/pub/Home.htm?l=en&t=ho

    Should I go to the stats or the publications section? I couldn't find it in stats... do they just publish this locally?
     
    #38     May 14, 2006
  9. #39     May 14, 2006
  10. Aaron

    Aaron

    The sample size doesn't cause the difference between mean and median, the skewness of the distribution does. And net worth is extremely skewed. The US has several people with a net worth of positive 1 billion, but no one with a net worth even approaching a negative 1 billion. :)
     
    #40     May 14, 2006