In East Asia, the middle-aged and elderly superrich run the show.
Forbes recorded 358 billionaires in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea combined, and most were middle-aged and elderly in their 40s to 70s, with differing rates of self-made billionaires and heirs.
ChinaForbes recorded 221 billionaires in mainland China with their collective assets worth $773.3 billion.
Of them, 96 superrich were in their 50s with collective assets of $285.6 billion, led by 51-year-old Jack Ma ― founder of Alibaba Group Holding ― with assets of $24 billion.
Sixty-seven billionaires were in their 4os with combined assets of $267.2 billion. The richest in this group was 44-year-old Ma Huateng, founder of Tencent with assets of $19.5 billion.
Almost all of China’s middle-aged superrich were self-made. A total of 95 out of 96 superrich in their 50s and 65 out of 67 in their 40s were self-made billionaires.
Taiwan and Hong Kong
Taiwan had 31 billionaires with collective assets of $75.2 billion. Of them, 16 were in their 50s and 60s with assets totaling $48.4 billion.
Six out of nine Taiwanese billionaires in their 60s were self-made. While four earned their fortune through manufacturing, such as electronics and computers.
The richest among them, with $7 billion assets, was 64-year-old Terry Gou, founder and chairman of Foxconn, which manufactures electronics for companies including Apple.
Three out of seven billionaires in their 50s were self-made, and most of them also found their fortune through manufacturing.
Tsai Eng-meng, 59-year-old chairman of food and drink company Want Want China, was the highest earning Taiwanese superrich in their 50s with assets of $8.4 billion.
Hong Kong had 55 billionaires with combined assets of $285.7 billion. Seventeen were in their 60s with collective assets of $64.4 billion and 12 were in their 50s with assets of $61.7 billion.
Thirteen out of 17 superrich in their 60s were self-made, as were nine out of 12 in their 50s. Most of Hong Kong’s riches were from real estate for both self-made billionaires and heirs.
Japan
Japan had a higher number of elderly superrich, with 10 out of 22 in their 60s and 70s having assets of $49.3 billion. Among them, seven were self-made billionaires.
Tadashi Yanai, 66-year-old founder of Fast Retailing ― parent company of clothing brand Uniqlo ― was the leading Japanese superrich in their 60s and also the nation’s richest with $22.5 billion in assets.
The highest-earning Japanese superrich in their 70s was Shigenobu Nagamori, 70-year-old chairman and CEO of manufacturing company Nidec Motors with assets of $3.6 billion.
South Korea
According to Forbes, South Korea had 29 billionaires with total assets of $88 billion.
Most Korean superrich ― nine ― were in their 40s. Four were self-made billionaires while five were company heirs.
The highest-earning Korean self-made superrich in their 40s was 41-year-old Kwon Hyuk-bin, CEO and founder of online gaming company Smilegate with assets of $3.6 billion.
The leading heir in their 40s was 47-year-old Samsung Group vice chairman Lee Jay-yong having assets of $11.6 billion.
Eight billionaires were in their 50s, with six of them being heirs. The leading Korean superrich in their 50s was 52-year-old Suh Kyung-bae, chairman of AmorePacific Group.
South Korea was the only country out of the five regions where heirs outnumbered self-made billionaires in both head count and value of assets.
By The Korea Herald Superrich Team (
sangyj@heraldcorp.com)
Kwon Nam-keun, Hong Seung-wan, Sung Yeon-jin, Bae Ji-sook, Yoon Hyun-jong, Min Sang-seek, Kim Hyun-il, Sang Youn-joo