What's new

Around 4% of world's billionaires Indians

Status
Not open for further replies.

Paan Singh

BANNED
Joined
Sep 8, 2010
Messages
7,636
Reaction score
0
New York: India is home to over four percent of the world's billionaires, including the likes of the Ambani brothers, Azim Premji and N R Narayan Murthy alongside Warren Buffet and Bill Gates in Forbes magazine's annual list of the world's richest people.

Forbes's list of 1226 billionaires is topped by Mexico's 72-year-old telecom czar Carlos Slim, boasting of a networth of USD 69 billion.

Slim retained his title as the world's richest man for the third year in a row. In the second spot is Microsoft founder Gates with a USD 61 billion networth followed by American investment giant and philanthropist Buffet whose networth is USD 44 billion.

Forbes said this year's 1,226 billionaires are a record high, up one percent from last year's total. The numbers are up significantly from the 140 billionaires who had made the cut when the list was first released 25 years ago.

Between them, this year's billionaires are worth a record USD 4.6 trillion and have an average net worth of USD 3.7 billion.

The list has 48 billionaires from India as well as nine of Indian-origin living in countries like Indonesia, Ireland, Thailand, UK and the US, taking the total number of billionaires hailing from India to 57. India's 48 billionaires have a total networth of USD 194.6 billion.

Among India's billionaires, the richest is Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani with a networth of USD 22.3 billion. The 54-year-old is ranked 19 in the global rich list.

"Mukesh Ambani is the world's richest Indian, despite losing USD 4.7 billion in the past year," Forbes said.

The publication added that a spat between Ambani's oil and gas conglomerate Reliance and India's Oil Ministry over declining output at KG-D6, India's largest offshore gas field, has dragged down the market cap of the country's most valuable company.

ArcelorMittal Chairman Lakshmi Mittal comes at the 21st position with a USD 20.7 billion networth. Forbes said Mittal lost USD 10.4 billion in the past year, more than anyone else in the world and dropped out of the top 10 rankings for the first time since 2004.

Mittal had ranked sixth in last year's list when his networth was USD 31.1 billion. Shares of ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steelmaker, tanked due to surging costs and tepid demand in Europe, Forbes said.

Wipro boss Azim Premji is the third richest Indian in the list. With a networth of USD 15.9 billion, 66-year-old Premji is ranked 41 on the Forbes list.

The list has only two women billionaires from India, both matriarchs of big corporate houses. Jindal group's Savitri Jindal is ranked 80 in the rich list with a networth of USD 10.9 billion. Chair of the media group Bennett Coleman Indu Jain, 75, is ranked 578th in the Forbes list with a networth of USD 2.2 billion.

With an USD 8.1 billion networth, Bharti Entreprises chairman Sunil Mittal is ranked 113. Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group chairman Anil Ambani comes in at the 118th position in the list, his networth of USD 7.8 billion, only about a third of that of his wealthier elder brother.

"Despite patch up with brother Mukesh that included a much photographed reunion in their late father's hometown, Anil Ambani continues on a losing streak, down one billion dollars in past year and down USD 34.2 billion from his 2008 peak," Forbes said.

Other billionaires from India include real estate major DLF chief K P Singh (USD 6.4 billion), IT company HCL's Shiv Nadar (USD five billion), healthcare tycoons Malvinder and Shivinder Singh (USD 3.5 billion), Godrej group chairman Adi Godrej (USD 2.4 billion), Chairman of the Bajaj group conglomerate Rahul Bajaj (USD 1.8 billion) and Infosys co-founder N R Narayan Murthy and his family (USD 1.7 billion).

With a networth of USD 1.4 billion, former Infosys chief executive Nandan Nilekani, pharma tycoons Ajay Piramal and K Anji Reddy and head of the Avantha group Gautum Thapar are tied for the 913rd rank.
Investment bigwig Rakesh Jhunjhunwala occupies the 1075th rank with USD 1.1 billion of networth. Tied for the 1153th rank is liqour baron Vijay Mallya and Spice group chief Bhupinder Kumar Modi with networths of a billion dollars each.

Also in the list is construction tycoon Pallonji Mistry, an Irish citizen, who with a networth of USD 9.7 billion is ranked 96th. Mistry's younger son Cyrus has been anointed successor to Tata group chief Ratan Tata when he retires in December. Incidentally, like last year, Tata is not on the rich list this year.

Among the Indians, who are based outside their native country and have been named in the Forbes list, is venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, whom Forbes calls the "rare Silicon Valley venture capitalist able to generate profits from a clean tech portfolio."

The IIT and Stanford University alumnus has a networth of USD 1.3 billion and is ranked 960. California-based Kavitark "Ram" Shriram, the founding board member of Google and one of the first investors in Google, comes in at rank 804. A trustee at Stanford University, Shriram's networth is USD 1.6 billion.

India-born, Indonesian citizen Sri Prakash Lohia and his brother Thai resident Aloke Lohia are ranked 634 and 683 respectively in the list. They are two of three brothers whose fortune spans India, Thailand and Indonesia through the Indorama group of companies involved in textiles, polyster and plastics.

Between them, the networth of the two brothers is USD four billion.

Software guru Romesh Wadhwani ranks 634 in the list with a networth of USD two billion. Based in California, the IIT Mumbai alumnus heads Symphony Technology Group which is focused on building software and services companies.

This year there were 128 new additions to the Forbes billionaire list, while 117 dropped off. The US retained its position as the global epicenter of wealth, boasting of being home to 425 billionaires, including Oracle's Larry Elison who had a networth of USD 36 billion.

Among the American billionaires are New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg (USD 22 billion), Google's founders Sergey Brin and Larry page (USD 18.7 billion), Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg (USD 17.5 billion), News Corp chief Rupert Murdoch (USD 8.3 billion) and fashion czar Ralph Lauren (USD 7.5 billion).

There were 96 Russians, 95 Chinese, 55 Germans, 37 British, 37 from Hong Kong, 36 Brazilians, 25 Canadians, and 24 billionaires each from Taiwan and Japan in the list.
Around 4% of world's billionaires Indians: Forbes
 
.
4 percent is not much for 1 sixth of worlds populated country. Its just too insignificant.
Sorry for being so harsh
 
.
soon i am gonna be in the list wait and watch. :D:D

---------- Post added at 12:37 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:35 AM ----------

4 percent is not much for 1 sixth of worlds populated country. Its just too insignificant.
Sorry for being so harsh
lol india has 58 official billionares
and we all know if u count unofficial ones we are no1 in the world.
anyways we r far ahead of europeans in the list. china and russia have 95. so we r doing good
 
. .
It makes no sense to celebrate inequality. We have so many who are very very poor.

So what do you want? Steal the rich and feed the poor.

These people took the risk and now they are enjoying the benefits. India is a free country. The Govt doesn't stop anybody from following their path and be rich, but only few have the guts to do it.As the saying goes " Those who don't take risk will work for people who took risk".
 
.
So what do you want? Steal the rich and feed the poor.

These people took the risk and now they are enjoying the benefits. India is a free country. The Govt doesn't stop anybody from following their path and be rich, but only few have the guts to do it.As the saying goes " Those who don't take risk will work for people who took risk".
Let them celebrate their hardwork. Should we as a country celebrate rich?
I am not asking to celebrate poverty, we should aim for equality and celebrate if we move in that direction.
 
.
Let them celebrate their hardwork. Should we as a country celebrate rich?
I am not asking to celebrate poverty, we should aim for equality and celebrate if we move in that direction.
these ppl are the major drivers of indian economy (tata, reliance etc etc). every 1% growth in indian economy pulls out 0.4% population from poverty. we we should celebrate.
 
.
4% from the soon to be most populist country in the world? :lol:
 
. . . .
so what's the percentage?

Country with fewer billionaires is always better than a country with about 35-40% of their total population under the global poverty line.
 
.
Country with fewer billionaires is always better than a country with about 35-40% of their total population under the global poverty line.

agreed. speaking of people in poverty, how many people did pakistan pull out of poverty this year??
 
.
agreed. speaking of people in poverty, how many people did pakistan pull out of poverty this year??

Not sure.. but im positive Pak's total population is less than India's total insolvent poor by almost a divisible of 2.0

India's total insufficient is about 320 million people.. while Pak is nearing 180 Million people total..
 
.
Not sure.. but im positive Pak's total population is less than India's total insolvent poor by almost a divisible of 2.0

India's total insufficient is about 320 million people.. while Pak is nearing 180 Million people total..

let us know when you start pulling people out of poverty. we may give you some pointers.
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom