Remember when it was cool to say you were a millionaire?
This awesome research by Millie Giles via Sherwood is here for you.

image created via AI
| Sometimes, they say, less is more… but, with money, more tends to be more. Even millionaires these days think they could do with some extra dough: a new survey from Northwestern Mutual, reported by Quartz, found that only one-third of Americans with at least $1 million worth of investable assets considered themselves “wealthy”. |
| That’s rich |
| From 2019 to 2022, the average American family’s net worth increased 23% to just over $1 million, per Business Insider. So, is being a millionaire actually the norm now? Well, no. In fact, the median American family’s net worth is only $192,900.This huge disparity between the average (mean) and the average (median) is because America’s wealth is skewed by its mega-rich. For example, if Bill Gates got into an elevator with me and 8 of my friends, the average net worth of that lift would work out as a little over $13 billion (once we’d finished wondering why the hell he was there).But exactly how uneven is wealth distribution in the US? |
| Household wealth data from the Federal Reserve reveals that, in the first quarter of 2024, the top 1% of American households (~1.3 million in total) held 30% of collective wealth, up from 23% in 1990. Meanwhile, the other side of the coin shows the share of wealth held by the bottom 50% (~66 million households) shrunk to just 2.5%.It seems that the ever-growing reserves of America’s ultra-wealthy have also tilted perspectives on what a lot of money really is. Now, rich people don’t even feel rich, and a sense of ‘money dysmorphia’ (feeling “irrationally insecure about finances”) is trickling down to the masses: in a recent survey by Qualtrics for Credit Karma, 29% of US adults reported experiencing money dysmorphia, while ~45% of Gen Z and millennials said they were “obsessed” with the idea of being rich. |

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