There are lots of different figures floating about - but despite recent declines, the ones I've checked all still have U.S. at the top of the pack in terms of number of millionaires...Actually, the US isn't even the top 20... Singapore is the #1.
Its not an insignificant portion in the RW - and in a setting like the OTU, with nobility, it would seem even more pertinent...Basically, I'm just wondering how inherited wealth or even inherited debt might play into this count of millionaires or should it just be ignored?
What I would like is a formula that I can plug population and per capita income into and come up with an average number of millionaires for worlds of that population and pci. I would then use a die roll (perhaps 2D-7*5% for +/- 25%) to establish the number of millionaires on the specific world.
After that, I'd calculate that 2/3rds of those had 1-9 millions, 2/3rds of the remainder had 10-99 millions, 2/3rds of the remainder had 100-999 millions, etc., etc.. (It would be nice if there was a simple way to account for the steepening of the pyramid at the top that Wil talks about, but if not, I'd just fiddle with the results by hand).
Hans
In connection with another thread I tried out Wil's formula on a generic TL15 world with a population of 90 billion and an 'Industrial' trade classification.
Hans
Hey, that's only 13 times as crowded as Earth today.If I was living on a world with a population of 90 billionand had the resources to live aboard a mega yacht, I'm going for it.
This feels like it should be spreadsheet-able. Given pop-code and average income, you could calculate how many earn a given figure.
Not without data on standard deviation (which will differ from world to world), and knowing the social (and therefore legal) attitude to inherited wealth (is it taxed heavily? Or not at all), general taxation levels and so forth, and just how long it is since the last revolution / general leveling event, and thus how many years and generations of re-accumulation have occurred in the mean time.
It's perfectly possible. You just ignore the variables and assume that they cancel out. You just have to be careful not to read more into the results than they can bear.It is impossible to lay down any sort of formula for determining this, because it depends upon a large number of variables.
Cr60,000 is a very high average income. The highest you can get with the Striker rules is Cr36,960 on a rich, agricultural TL15 world.I got surprising results from a population of only 10 million (a major city on Earth) with an average income of Cr 60,000.
Inherited wealth is a major issue here in the UK. If your parents own their own home you have just become a homeowner, if you parents own land you have just become a landowner, if your parents own their own factory you have just become a factory owner, if your parents are part of the nobility and own land/property you have just become immensely wealthy.Inherited wealth is a bit of a non-issue in western societies. The studies show that it seldom lasts even the lifetime of the children, unless it's been set up as a family trust. Given that all of the truly exhorbitantly wealthy on record have been western or north african... and have been TL 5+ (Well, JP Morgan may qualify at TL 4)... the data is a pretty short set.
The average income here in the UK is £26,500, in the US it is around $50,000.