12% of US Millionaires Are Educators (Video)

Save are teachers.   (Lou Minatti) Those poor, deprived teachers now make up 12% of US millionaires. And, here we thought it was the evil bankers and greedy doctors who were making all the money? The Wall Street Journal Blog reported: America’s millionaire population is still growing – though not by much. The number of […]

  • by:
  • 08/21/2022
ad-image

Save are teachers.

 

(Lou Minatti)

Those poor, deprived teachers now make up 12% of US millionaires.

And, here we thought it was the evil bankers and greedy doctors who were making all the money?

The Wall Street Journal Blog reported:

America’s millionaire population is still growing – though not by much. The number of millionaires in America grew by 200,000 in 2011, according to a new report from Chicago-based Spectrem Group. That sounds like a lot — especially with so many Americans still losing jobs and homes. But it represents a growth rate of only 2% – much slower than the growth in 2009 and 2010. According to Spectrem, there are now 8.6 million households in the U.S. with a total net worth (minus principal residence) of $1 million or more.

The number of households worth $5 million or more and $25 million or more also remained fairly flat, with growth of less than 2%. There are now 1,078,000 households worth $5 million or more and about 107,000 people worth $25 million or more. The number of millionaire-households is still well below the pre-crisis high, when there were 9.2 million worth $1 million or more. (Spectrem uses surveys of more than 2,500 families for its report).

George Walper, president of Spectrem Group, said the results show that weak financial markets and the slow recovery in real-estate (especially investment real-estate for the wealthy) held back growth. “We’re still not back to pre-crisis levels,” he said. He added that while the optimism of millionaires is increasing, “these folks are still worried.”

The report also broke down today’s millionaires by occupation and former occupation if retired. Managers make up the largest group, with 17%, followed by educators (12%), corporate executives (7%), entrepreneur/business owners (6%) and attorneys and accounts.

Obviously, teaching is not just 'for the kids' anymore.

Image:

Opinion

View All

Five activist causes Keir Starmer took more time to address than Henry Nowak's murder by Sikh man with 'ceremonial' kirpan

Amid backlash surrounding the murder, criticisms have intensified against Starmer, who previously mov...

Paris is burning after Paris-Saint Germain defeats Arsenal in UEFA Champions League final

French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez said that 780 people were detained in Paris and other cities. ...

US seizes $1 BILLION in Iranian cryptocurrency assets: Scott Bessent

"We have seized about a billion dollars of their crypto," Bessent said. "Just outright grabbed the wa...

UK substitute teacher ADMITS to taking over 100 upskirt photos of students

Abusali Rahman, a 36-year-old British national of Bangladeshi ethnicity, will face sentencing in Sept...