There are 2,095 billionaires today, down from 2,153 in 2019, according to Forbes’ billionaire list for 2020 published this week. They’re also slightly poorer on average, with a combined net worth of $8 trillion — down from $8.7 trillion last year. A record 1,062 billionaires saw their fortunes decline, “both reflective of the turbulent markets and the coronavirus pandemic,” said Forbes. WeWork’s ousted CEO Adam Neumann dropped from the rankings entirely. Forbes noted the US still has the most billionaires with 614, trailed by greater China (which includes Macao and Hong Kong) with 456.
Four of the top 10 billionaires are tech execs
Global pandemic or not, Jeff Bezos persists as the richest person in the world. Coincidentally, novelist-slash-philanthropist MacKenzie Bezos made her debut on this year’s rich list at number 22. Another notable entry is embattled Zoom CEO Eric Yuan, who debuted on the list at #293 with a healthy $5.5 billion. Microsoft founder Bill Gates is number two (again) with an estimated personal net worth of $98 billion, an increase of $1.5 billion from 2019. In fact, tech’s gurus are killing it: four of Forbes’ official 10 richest billionaires are technology execs. Oracle’s technology chief Larry Ellison is the fifth-richest with $66.2 billion. Facebook’s adult-wunderkind Mark Zuckerberg is seventh, worth $54.7 billion. Microsoft’s former chief exec Steve Ballmer also continues to hang around. While certainly loaded, Ballmer was only worth $52.7 when Forbes generated its final rankings, which meant he didn’t quite make the grade. Neither did Google’s Larry Page and Sergey Brin, whose roughly $50 million fortunes put them in 13th and 14th place. You can check out the full 2020 index of the world’s billionaire’s here.