NEW YORK, March 8 (Xinhua) -- Bill Gates remained the world's wealthiest
person for the 13th straight year, followed by friend and fellow philanthropist
Warren Buffett, according to the 2007 Forbes billionaires List released on
Thursday.
With the biggest one-year gain over the past decade, Mexican telecom giant
Carlos Slim Helu increased his wealth by 19 billion dollars, now just 3 billion
dollars shy of Buffett.
The members of the 2007 Forbes billionaires List are worth a total of 3.5
trillion dollars, climbing 900 billion dollars from 2006. The number of
billionaires increased to a record 946, up 153from last year, and includes 178
new billionaires.
"This growth in the billionaires list is a mere reflection of a dynamic
global economy," said Steve Forbes, the magazine's CEO and chief editor. "More
people are better off on this Earth than ever before."
There are two newcomers to the Top 10: Spaniard Amancio Ortega, No. 23 last year,
whose fashion franchise Zara and his 24 billion dollars net worth put him at
No. 8; and Canadian David Thomson and family, who replace the late Kenneth
Thomson and family (No.9 in 2006), at No.10.
Two-thirds of last year's billionaires are richer this year, with net worth
up for every member of the top 50 with a few exceptions: Paul Allen (No. 19)
dropped 4 billion dollars to fall out of the top ten, and fellow tech mogul
Michael Dell fell from No. 12 to No. 30 with a loss of 1.3 billion dollars over
the past year. The Koch brothers remained the same as last year at 12 billion
dollars each.
There are 53 nations and regions represented on this year's list, along
with additional entries from Hong Kong, Taiwan and Monaco. There are 415
billionaires from the United States, representing 44 percent of the entire list.
New faces include Starbucks chief Howard Schultz (No. 840), Michael Eisner (No.
891),and Canadians Mike Lazaridis (No. 583) and Jim Balsillie (No. 618),co-chief
executives from Research In Motion (the makers of BlackBerry).
Russia has seen a surge in wealth, adding 19 new billionaires. After
two decades, Japan is no longer Asia's top spot for billionaires: India has
36, worth a total of 191 billion dollars, followed by Japan with 24, with a
total net worth of 64 billion dollars. Sixty percent of this year's billionaires
are self-made, and of those, 10 are women.