Ερευνα: Οι Γερμανοι πιο πλουσιοι απο ποτε (αρθρο στα αγγλικα)

German private households collectively hold more wealth than ever before, according to a report released by the German Federal Bank on Monday.

A strong labour market and comfortable incomes have helped German households’ financial assets to rise by €140 billion in the first quarter of the year, according to the report, climbing to €5.212 trillion – a record high.

“In the first quarter of 2015, the financial assets of households rose exceptionally steeply by just under €140 billion (i.e. 2.8 percent) on the quarter,” the report stated.

Assets like cash, securities, bank deposits and claims on insurance companies totaled €53 billion while valuation gains – such as mutual fund shares – reached over €87 billion.

The values did not include art or property.

Germans still showed an “ongoing high level of risk aversion” and did not take advantage of low interest rates by taking out significant loans. Households’ total liability increased by just 0.2 percent to €1.588 trillion, with €4 billion in loans taken out during the first quarter.

Most of the loans were taken out with domestic banks to buy houses.

The combination of rising overall wealth and low liabilities resulted in a “substantial increase” in net financial assets of just under €137 billion (3.9 percent) to €3,624 billion during the quarter.

The debt ratio – or the total liabilities as a percentage of annualized nominal gross domestic product – shrank by 0.3 percentage points to 54.3 percent by the end of the reporting period.

But such wealth is not necessarily shared equally across the country. A study last year revealed that the distribution of wealth in Germany was the most unequal in the eurozone.

Another study this year showed that Germany has some of the biggest gaps between rich and poor among developed countries.

Published: 20 Jul 2015

Source: TheLocal.de

 

Click on this link to read the news in German on the site Handelsblatt.com.

 

While all this is happening, the so-called newspaper that most Germans read, the Bild, is claiming something utterly absurd. That Greeks are richer than the Germans. What a sorry excuse for journalism… and how sad is it that it is the number one selling “newspaper” in Germany. Here is the infamous cover:

 

Bild-Greece