The world’s richest people are becoming wealthier and richer.
The top 1 percent now own as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent combined.
In a world where inequality is rampant, it is no surprise that they are more than willing to share their wealth.
According to Forbes, the richest 1 percent of Americans own more wealth than the bottom 99 percent combined, a figure that includes nearly half of the world population.
While the wealthiest 1 percent is still dwarfed by the rest of the population, their wealth has skyrocketed.
They now own nearly 10 times the wealth of the bottom half of households.
Their wealth is also growing faster than the rest, which means they are making more money, but not as much as their peers.
According the International Monetary Fund, the top 1% of the US population has increased their wealth by a staggering 10 percent between 2014 and 2016.
The richest 1% in the US now own the same amount of wealth as half of all households.
The global economy is slowly recovering, and is still far from recovering from the 2008 financial crisis.
But as inequality grows, so too does the global demand for financial services.
This demand for services from banks, financial institutions, and hedge funds has been fueled by a global demand from the super-rich for access to the global financial system.
The financial system is increasingly being controlled by the 1 percent, and many of these 1 percenters are the ones that control the global system of finance.
This is a problem for the global economy, which has become more and more dependent on a financial system that is increasingly controlled by a handful of super-wealthy individuals.
It is also a problem that has been exacerbated by the financial crisis and the subsequent economic downturn that is sweeping the globe.
While these issues are important, they are not the only issues facing the global economic system.
As the global global economy continues to recover, many of the global super- wealthy are also facing economic hardships.
For example, a report by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) shows that in 2016, the median global salary rose to $100,000.
But in the United States, the global median salary was just $41,000, and the median income was just over $1,000 per year.
The median household income in the U.S. has declined over the past few years, and more and less of the money earned is being used for the necessities of life.
As a result, more and, more of the funds that are being used to pay the salaries of the super rich are going toward debt service on credit card and mortgage debt.
It was not always this way.
While global wealth was growing rapidly in the 1960s and 1970s, it was not as rapidly growing as it is today.
The economic crisis of the 1980s and 1990s made the global wealth inequality that we now have a global economic crisis.
Since then, the financial system has become even more complex.
Today, the banks are not just using the wealth from their own assets to service the needs of the people, but they are using that wealth to service their own interests.
The banking system is essentially a monopoly, and it is only the super wealthy that can afford to pay a monopoly.
The super rich have made their wealth from the banks and other financial institutions.
This wealth is largely concentrated in the hands of the very few.
And, if you ask many people, the super elite are the only ones who have a real say in the system.
When you consider the role that the super powerful play in our economic system, you can see how they have been able to control the system to the point where they are able to pay off the debts they incurred.
And this is the biggest reason why the financial sector has become so complex.
The Financial Crisis of 2008 caused a lot of the problems that we are seeing today.
But it did not cause the financial crash.
What caused the financial meltdown was a combination of factors, including the collapse of the housing market, a huge increase in the amount of money that is being spent on Wall Street and the resulting debt bubble.
But there are many more factors that have contributed to the financial bubble.
The most obvious one is that the financial industry has been heavily leveraged up in recent years.
The Federal Reserve created a system of floating-rate instruments to allow banks to lend money at lower rates than the traditional lending rate, but to keep their profits going.
The money created in this system was used to buy the credit of other financial entities.
This credit was then used to lend out the money that was being borrowed, and in turn, buy more credit from other financial companies.
When this bubble popped, it caused a massive surge in the stock market, which created a huge profit for the financial companies that were making money off the stock bubble.
This was not the first time that this had happened, and certainly not the last.
When the financial market was inflated by the stock markets, investors bought up