The latest Office for National Statistics ONS survey covers
2012-2014 and highlights the gulf between the country’s richest and poorest
groups. Britain’s richest households have pulled further ahead of the rest of
the population as house prices have accelerated, with the top 10% now owning
almost half of the country’s £11.1tn total private wealth.
The ONS found that the top 10% owned at least £1,048,000 in
assets, while the bottom 10% owned £12,600 or less. This underlined the gulf
that separates the wealthiest, who tend to own their own homes, and the
poorest, who have little or no nest egg set aside for the future. The median
household private pension wealth for the top tenth of the population was
£749,000, compared with £2,800 for households in the least wealthy half of
households.
The ONS said average household wealth was £225,100 in
2012-14, when it carried out its latest survey of the nation’s assets. Since
the previous survey was carried out two years earlier, the top tenth of
households had seen a 21% increase in their wealth, including property. Over
the same period, the poorest half of households also saw their wealth rise —
but only by 7%.
Total property wealth in Britain, net of mortgages,
increased by almost £400bn over the two years between its latest wealth
surveys, the ONS found. Mark Posniak, managing director of Dragonfly Property
Finance, said: “In 2014, Finland’s GDP was £184bn, which means Britain’s
property market is effectively an economy in itself. UK homeowners have been
able to sit back while their properties, collectively, generate more cash than
entire countries.”
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