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10 Thais On Forbes' Super-Rich List, Up From Five Last Year


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10 Thais on Forbes' super-rich list, up from five last year

The Nation

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Dhanin

BANGKOK: -- Thai billionaires have seen their wealth skyrocket in a year, with 10 making it into Forbes' list of the wealthy, compared with just five last year.

Leading the Thai billionaires is Dhanin Chearvanont, chairman of Charoen Pokphand Group. He and his family were worth US$14.3 billion (Bt426 billion) as of this month. Ranked as the 58th-richest person in the world, Dhanin saw his net worth increase by $7 billion from the same month last year.

Trailing is liquor and property tycoon Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, who has just completed the $11-billion acquisition of Singapore's Fraser and Neave. His net worth of $11.7 billion put him at 82nd, up from 184th last year with $5.5 billion.

Others are as follows:

_ Krit Ratanarak, $1.95 billion ($1.2 billion as of March 2012). Krit's family is a major shareholder of Bangkok Broadcasting and TV, which operates Channel 7.

_ Aloke Lohia, chief executive officer of Indorama Venture, $1.3 billion ($1.9 billion).

_ Thongma Vijitpongpun, CEO of Pruksa Real Estate, $2 billion.

_ Prasert Prasarttong-Osoth, founder and CEO of Bangkok Airways, $1.85 billion.

_ Former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and family, $1.7 billion.

_ Vanich Chaiyawan, chairman of Thai Life Insurance, $1.4 billion.

_ Keeree Kanjanapas, CEO of BTS Group Holdings, $1.3 billion.

_ Wichai Thongtang, lawyer turned investor, $1.1 billion.

Dhanin, Charoen, Aloke, Krit and Chaleo Yoovidhya were the five Thai billionaires on the Forbes list last year.

For the fourth year in a row, Mexican telecommunications magnate Carlos Slim Helu tops Forbes' 27th annual world's billionaires list, with net worth of $73 billion, up from $69 billion last year.

Bill Gates retains the No 2 spot with net worth of $67 billion. Zara fashion firm's Amancio Ortega moves up two spots to third with net worth of $57 billion, ahead of Warren Buffett with net worth of $53.5 billion.

This marks the first year Buffett has not been in the top three since 2000, in spite of being the second-biggest gainer this year, up $9.5 billion. Forbes said that worldwide, 1,426 billionaires made up the 2013 List of the World's Richest People. Rebounding equity markets and strong consumer brands lifted a rash of newcomers into the billionaire ranks. In 2012, 1,226 billionaires were counted with combined net worth of $4.6 trillion or $3.7 billion on average. The average increased to $3.79 billion in 2013, when the combined net worth hit a new record at $5.4 trillion.

The 2013 Forbes billionaires list now boasts 1,426 names, with an aggregate net worth of $5.4 trillion, up from $4.6 trillion. It found 210 new 10-figure fortunes. Once again the United States leads the list with 442 billionaires, followed by the Asia-Pacific region (386), Europe (366), the Americas (129) and the Middle East and Africa (103).

According to Forbes, resurgent asset prices are the driving force behind the rising wealth of the super-rich around the globe.

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-- The Nation 2013-03-06

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So the rich get richer and the poor, poorer, true Capitalism at its finest.

regards Worgeordie

Not all rich are getting richer, and not all poor are getting poorer. Many rich people used to be poor.

In Thailand, millions of poor people have got richer. Poverty rates have dropped from over 40% to under 10%.

Sounds like you're a jealous loser who doesn't even know the facts.

Edited by davejones
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nice to see all stays like it is : rich getting richer ... indeed... let the flow of graft continue

a nice break for the companies to reek even more profits on the behalve of their working employees paid per day, what a working in the west gets per hour

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Not to worry but with Asean rules coming into effect not to worry many Chinese Thais who have had their government issued licenses to make uninterrupted profits will find it harder to compete but of course others will be saved that bother by sake of Thai national industry being saved being fully opened to Asean companies. If you do not like the rich you can always boycott their companies, if you like eating only home grown rice, home spun clothes and walking everywhere.

Edited by northernboy
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So the rich get richer and the poor, poorer, true Capitalism at its finest.

regards Worgeordie

Not all rich are getting richer, and not all poor are getting poorer. Many rich people used to be poor.

In Thailand, millions of poor people have got richer. Poverty rates have dropped from over 40% to under 10%.

Sounds like you're a jealous loser who doesn't even know the facts.

I really would love to see your source that poverty rates are under 10%.

Not sure about many rich people used to be poor.

How many is many 199? Remember that the population of Thailand is 66,000,000. While 199 can be construed as many it in no way represents any significant number.

How much money is rich to you. What is your idea of poor.

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So the rich get richer and the poor, poorer, true Capitalism at its finest.

regards Worgeordie

Have to disagree with you worgeordie.

True PT at work.

Hi Hellodolly you would, and what is PT,?

Regards Worgeordie

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So the rich get richer and the poor, poorer, true Capitalism at its finest.

regards Worgeordie

Have to disagree with you worgeordie.

True PT at work.

Hi Hellodolly you would, and what is PT,?

Regards Worgeordie

PT Are wonderful Government

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davejones, on 06 Mar 2013 - 10:18, said:

worgeordie, on 06 Mar 2013 - 09:41, said:

So the rich get richer and the poor, poorer, true Capitalism at its finest.

regards Worgeordie

Not all rich are getting richer, and not all poor are getting poorer. Many rich people used to be poor.

In Thailand, millions of poor people have got richer. Poverty rates have dropped from over 40% to under 10%.

Sounds like you're a jealous loser who doesn't even know the facts.

It is indeed true that the poverty rate is below 10%. It is also true that Thailand has the one of the greatest income gaps in Asia, and it is growing.

You know, you can say someone is jealous and write them off. But, there are many other negative qualities about people that could equally be cited in this kind of discussion, such as selfishness, greed, etc. So, pick you bad personal trait: jealous losers, or greedy capitalists. I'd say someone, a billionaire let's say, who pays his hundreds or thousands of workers a subsistence income while the billionaire himself makes, well, millions from those workers, is pretty selfish and greedy. That worse than being a single, solitary jealous loser.

Edited by Jawnie
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Well, I googled a little and actually found a self-made $ multi-millionaire in Thailand, not old money. Meet Thai citizen William E Heinecke, founder of/with stakes in Pizza Company, Marriot, Four Seasons, Sizzler.

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