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About 3,000 Nigerians lost millionaire status in 10 years – Report

About 3,000 Nigerians lost millionaire status in 10 years – Report

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No fewer than 2, 949 Nigerians lost their millionaire status in one decade, according to the 2023 Africa Wealth Report compiled by Henley and Partners.

Nigeria, the report stated, experienced negative millionaire growth of 30 per cent from 2012 to 2022.

According to the report, Africa’s ‘Big 5’ wealth markets include South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya and Morocco.

“Together, they account for 56 per cent of Africa’s high-net-worth individuals and over 90 per cent of the continent’s billionaires,” it partly read.

The wealth categories are split into millionaires—individuals with a net worth above $1m; centimillionaires—individuals with a net worth above $100m and billionaires—individuals with a net worth above $1bn.

South Africa has 37,800 millionaires, 98 centimillionaires and 5 billionaires.

Egypt came second with 16,100 millionaires, 54 centimillionaires and 8 billionaires, while Nigeria ranked third with 9,800 millionaires, 27 centimillionaires and four billionaires. Kenya has 7,700 millionaires, 15 centimillionaire and no billionaires. Morocco has 5,800 millionaires, 28 centimillionaire and four billionaires.

Others include Mauritius (4,900 millionaires, 10 centimillionaire and no billionaire), Algeria (2,800 millionaires, eight centimillionaire and one billionaire), Ethiopia (2,700 millionaires, four centimillionaire and no billionaire), Ghana (2,600 millionaires, five centimillionaire and no billionaire) and Tanzania (2,400 millionaires, six centimillionaire and one billionaire).

However, total high-net-worth individual numbers in Africa fell by 12 per cent between 2012 and 2022. The continent currently has 138,000 millionaires, 328 centimillionaires and 23 billionaires.

Performance was constrained by poor growth in the three largest African markets, South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria, which saw 21 per cent, 25 per cent and 30 per cent of negative growth.

Within that period, the report revealed that “Rwanda was the top performing market in Africa, with millionaire growth of 72 per cent, followed by Mauritius, the Seychelles, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Morocco and Kenya’s high-net-worth individual populations also grew solidly.”

Meanwhile, “Ethiopia and Ghana, whose millionaire populations had been growing rapidly until 2019, have struggled over the past few years, which pulled back their 10-year growth rates.”

Although five out of Africa’s top 20 saw a decline in their wealth in the past decade, none was more significant than Nigeria’s where 30 per cent of the wealthiest individuals fell below the million-dollar mark.

The 2023 Africa Wealth Report highlights the need for policymakers to promote more inclusive economic growth policies and address the structural challenges that limit growth.

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