미국인 주식시장 불평등. 소득 하위 50% 주식보유량은 전체 0.7%, 상위 10%가 전체 주식의 89-90%를 소유 (2020)
미국인 주식시장 불평등 구조화. 소득 하위 50% 주식보유량은 전체 0.7%, 상위 10%가 전체 주식의 89-90%를 소유
- Top 1% 51.8%
- Top 90-99% 35.4%
- 50%-99% 12.1%
- Bottom 50% 0.7%
출처.
Wealth gap grows as rising corporate profits boost stock holdings controlled by richest households

Who owns stocks: Households by net worth
- Top 1% 51.8%
- Top 90-99% 35.4%
- 50%-99% 12.1%
- Bottom 50% 0.7%
(Q1 2020)
Source: Federal Reserve
For Ivory Johnson, head of Delancey Wealth Management and a member of the CNBC Advisory Council, these statistics are emblematic of the growing perception gap between Wall Street and Main Street.
“The majority of people don’t own stocks and they don’t care the Nasdaq is up 30 percent this year,” he told me.
While the wealth gap has been growing for decades, Johnson lays part of the problem at the feet of the Federal Reserve, who he says has been propping up stock prices for years.
“Twenty percent of U.S. companies are zombie companies — they only survive because the Federal Reserve is propping them up. You have a safety net for stocks provided by the Fed, but only a l
a limited version of that for people who really need help.”
Broader wealth statistics recently published by the Federal Reserve are not much more encouraging. There is an equally wide gap between what the wealthy own and what the bottom 50% own.
It’s largely real estate.
The top 1% have 12.8% of their net worth in real estate. The bottom 50% have 54.4% in real estate.
It’s the other way around for stocks. The top 1% have 34% of their net worth in stocks, the bottom 50% have only 2.2%. The very wealthy also have much more of their wealth tied up in private businesses and “other assets.”
Top 1% of households: Assets
- Equities 34%
- Other assets 22.4%
- Private businesses 21.7%
- Real estate 12.8%
- Pensions 5.9%
- Consumer durables 3.2%
Source: Federal Reserve
Bottom 50% of households: Assets
- Real estate 54.4%
- Consumer durables 20.4%
- Other assets 12%
- Pensions 9.4%
- Equities 2.2%
- Private businesses 1.7%
Source: Federal Reserve
What to do? Cairo and Sim go so far as to suggest higher taxes on the wealthy as a means to redistribute wealth: “Carefully designed redistribution policies can be quite effective macroprudential policy tools and more research is warranted in this area.”
Johnson says taxing the wealthy isn’t going to work, and not just because the rich have lobbyists. “You can tax wealthy people 100 percent and it won’t cover the deficit,” he told me. “The question is, what is fair and what will work?”
The news is not entirely grim. Edward Wolff, an NYU economics professor who has studied wealth distribution trends for many years, said the poor could see higher returns, even on their lesser investments.
“The authors appear to miss the fact that the poor have relatively higher debt and therefore leverage,” he said in an email. “What this means is that the poor actually have a higher rate of return on their portfolio than the rich and see greater growth on their wealth over time from capital gains.”




