The study defines millionaires as those with net assets of $1 million or more.
India was placed fourth among Top-5 source countries for migrating millionaires.
For the second successive year, Australia topped the list of countries attracting the maximum number of ultra-rich people, beating popular hotspots like the United States and the United Kingdom. An estimated 11,000 millionaires moved to Australia in 2016, while 10,000 moved to the US and 3,000 moved to the UK. The study said that global wealth migration accelerated in 2016 with 82,000 millionaires shifting overseas, compared to 64,000 in 2015.
| MILLIONAIRE MIGRANTS | |
| Top-5 destinations (net inflow) | |
| Australia | 11,000 |
| United States | 10,000 |
| Canada | 8,000 |
| UAE | 5,000 |
| New Zealand | 4,000 |
| Top-5 source countries (net outflow) | |
| France | 12,000 |
| China | 9,000 |
| Brazil | 8,000 |
| India | 6,000 |
| Turkey | 6,000 |
| Figures pertain to the year 2016; Source: The 2017 Global Wealth Review | |
India was home 264,000 millionaires and 95 billionaires with total wealth held in the country amounting to an estimated $6.2 trillion (as of December 2016), the report said.
The report attributed Australia’s growing popularity to the country’s healthcare system, location advantages for doing business in emerging Asian countries, insulation from the refugee crisis in Europe, safety, lower inheritance tax, among others.
On the other end of the spectrum, the countries that lost large numbers of high net worth individuals in 2016 included France, Turkey and Brazil. The report said that France – with 12,000 millionaires moving out of the country in 2016 - was being heavily impacted by rising religious tensions between Christians and Muslims, especially in urban areas.
“We expect that millionaire migration away from France will accelerate over the next decade as these tensions escalate. In our view, other European countries where religious tensions are starting to emerge such as Belgium, Germany, Austria, the UK, Holland and Sweden will also be negatively affected in the near future,” the report said.
Commenting on the adverse impact of millionaires leaving a country, the report noted that this has negative impact on the local currency, local stock market and the property market. “Millionaires employ large numbers of people. Around 30% of millionaires are business owners,” the report said. This also has an impact on local consumption of goods and services and tax collection.
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