# DE Wealth Distribution **Last Updated:** 2026-04-23 **Update Method:** Manual β€” Bundesbank PHF (triennial), ECB DWA (quarterly), WID (ongoing) **Coverage:** Net wealth distribution, concentration, composition, inheritance β€” Germany --- ## 🎯 BEST ESTIMATE | Metric | Value | Confidence | Last Updated | |--------|-------|------------|--------------| | **Wealth Gini (survey, PHF)** | **72.4%** | 95% | 2023 (PHF Wave 5) | | **Wealth Gini (DWA-adjusted)** | **~76%** | 85% | 2024 (ECB DWA) | | **Top-10% wealth share (PHF)** | **54%** | 95% | 2023 (PHF Wave 5) | | **Top-10% wealth share (WID)** | **~60%** | 85% | 2021 (DIW DP 2105) | | **Top-1% wealth share (WID)** | **~27%** | 80% | 2021 (DIW DP 2105) | | **Bottom-50% wealth share** | **2.4%** | 90% | 2023 (PHF Wave 5) | | **Mean net wealth** | **€324,800** | 95% | 2023 (PHF Wave 5) | | **Median net wealth** | **~€106,000** | 90% | 2023 (PHF Wave 5) | **One-liner:** Germany's top 10% hold 54% of wealth, bottom 50% just 2.4%. **Caveat:** Survey-based (PHF/HFCS) underestimates top wealth; DWA/WID adjustments raise top shares by 6-10 percentage points. Top-1% share unavailable from surveys β€” only from WID reconstructions. --- ## Quick Context Germany has one of the highest wealth Gini coefficients in the Eurozone (72.4% survey-based, ~76% adjusted). The gap between income inequality (Gini 33.7) and wealth inequality (Gini 72.4) is enormous β€” wealth is far more concentrated than income. Low homeownership (~45% west, ~29% east) is a key structural driver: renters have median wealth of €18,300 vs. €450,200 for mortgage-free homeowners. --- ## Methodology Summary **Approach:** Primary metrics from Bundesbank Panel on Household Finances (PHF) Wave 5 (2023), supplemented by ECB Distributional Wealth Accounts (DWA) and World Inequality Database (WID) for top-tail adjustments. **Sources:** - Bundesbank PHF 2023 (Monthly Report, April 2025) - ECB HFCS Wave 4 Statistical Tables (July 2023) - ECB Distributional Wealth Accounts (Economic Bulletin 5/2024) - DIW Discussion Paper 2105: Albers, Bartels, Schularick β€” "Wealth and Its Distribution in Germany, 1895–2021" - World Inequality Database (wid.world/country/germany/) **Definition Used:** Net wealth = total assets (real estate, financial assets, business equity, valuables) minus total liabilities (mortgages, consumer debt). Household-level for PHF/HFCS; equal-split individual adults for WID. --- ## Detailed Findings ### Wealth Gini Trend (Bundesbank PHF) | Wave | Year | Wealth Gini | Note | |------|------|-------------|------| | Wave 3 | 2017 | ~74% | β€” | | Wave 4 | 2021 | 72.8% | β€” | | Wave 5 | 2023 | 72.4% | Nominal growth, real decline | Virtually no change in inequality across waves. The DWA-adjusted Gini (~76%) is higher because surveys systematically undercount the wealthy (differential non-response). ### Wealth Concentration (PHF 2023) | Group | Share of total net wealth | |-------|--------------------------| | Top 1% (WID only) | ~27% | | Top 5% (DWA) | ~48–49% | | Top 10% (PHF) | 54% | | P50–P90 | ~43% | | Bottom 50% | 2.4% | - P90/median ratio: 7.6 (2023), up from 6.8 (2021) - Mean/median ratio: 3.1 (2023) ### Wealth Composition by Position | Wealth position | Primary assets | Secondary assets | |----------------|----------------|------------------| | Bottom 50% (renters) | Savings accounts, vehicles | Low-risk financial instruments | | Middle (homeowners) | Real estate (dominant) | Savings, insurance | | Top 10% | Business equity, financial assets (~50%) | Real estate as investment | | Top 1% | Business stakes, shares, funds, bonds | Multiple real estate holdings | - Median wealth of homeowners (no mortgage): **€450,200** - Median wealth of homeowners (with mortgage): **€379,900** - Median wealth of renters: **€18,300** - Homeownership rate: ~45% (west), ~29% (east) ### Inheritance Patterns | Wealth quintile | % received inheritance | Average value | |----------------|----------------------|---------------| | Top quintile (Q5) | ~65% | Significantly above mean | | Overall average | β€” | €193,000 (current value) | | Bottom quintile (Q1) | Low (~10-15%) | ~€30,000 range | *Source: OECD "Inheritance Taxation in OECD Countries" (2021), DIW Economic Bulletin 16/2016* - Receiving an inheritance lifts a household by approximately **14 net wealth percentiles** on average - In Germany, inheritance is relatively MORE important for wealth accumulation among less wealthy households (unlike Austria/France) - In absolute terms, wealthy households receive far larger inheritances ### Real vs. Nominal Wealth (PHF 2023) | Measure | 2021 | 2023 | Change | |---------|------|------|--------| | Mean net wealth (nominal) | €316,500 | €324,800 | +3% | | Mean net wealth (real, 2021 prices) | €268,700 | €239,200 | **-11%** | Inflation eroded real wealth significantly between 2021 and 2023. --- ## Source Analysis | Source | Strengths | Weaknesses | Weight | |--------|-----------|------------|--------| | **Bundesbank PHF** | Official; triennial; detailed composition data; largest German wealth survey | Under-represents top tail; triennial lag | Very High | | **ECB DWA** | National-accounts-adjusted; quarterly updates; corrects survey bias | Model-dependent; shorter time series (since 2015) | High | | **WID (DIW DP 2105)** | Top-tail correction via tax data + rich lists; 125-year time series | Academic estimates; less frequently updated | High | | **OECD Inheritance** | Cross-national comparable; standardized methodology | Based on older HFCS waves; limited country coverage | Medium | ### Key Source Conflicts 1. **Top-10% share:** PHF says 54%, WID says ~60%. Resolution: PHF is raw survey (lower bound), WID adjusts for differential non-response (upper bound). Both are valid for different purposes β€” PHF for trend, WID for level. 2. **Bottom-50% share:** PHF says 2.4%, WID says ~1.2%. Resolution: Different unit of analysis β€” PHF uses households, WID uses equal-split individual adults. Household units compress inequality at the bottom. --- ## Alternative Estimates & Why We Differ | Estimate | Source | What It Actually Measures | Why It Differs | |----------|--------|--------------------------|----------------| | Gini 72.4% | PHF 2023 | Survey responses, household level | Raw survey β€” lower bound | | Gini ~76% | ECB DWA | Adjusted to national accounts | Corrects underreporting | | Top-10%: 54% | PHF 2023 | Survey-reported wealth, households | Under-samples ultra-rich | | Top-10%: ~60% | WID 2021 | Adjusted via tax + capitalization | Corrects non-response | ### Why Our Approach - We report BOTH survey-based and adjusted estimates because neither alone tells the full story - PHF 2023 (Wave 5) is the most current official data point available - WID/DWA adjustments are necessary for top-tail accuracy but carry model uncertainty - The Gini difference (72.4% vs ~76%) itself is informative β€” it quantifies how much surveys miss **Key insight:** The 4-point Gini gap between survey and adjusted estimates is not a contradiction β€” it measures how much wealth is invisible to household surveys, concentrated in the top 0.1%. --- ## Research Metadata | Attribute | Value | |-----------|-------| | **Research Date** | 2026-04-23 | | **Researcher** | Sven / PAI | | **Method** | Bundesbank PHF (primary); ECB DWA + WID (top-tail adjustment) | | **Confidence Level** | 85–95% for survey metrics; 80% for WID top-1% | | **Known Gaps** | Decile-level composition percentages (in PHF tables, not web-accessible); top-0.1% share; pension wealth (excluded from net wealth) | | **Update Frequency** | PHF: triennial (next: ~2026); DWA: quarterly; WID: irregular | --- ## Connection to DE-Plan - Wealth Gini 72.4% vs income Gini 33.7 β†’ **CHALLENGE 4**: material inequality is far deeper than income metrics suggest; precarity is structural - Bottom-50% holding 2.4% β†’ **CHALLENGE 4**: half the population has no meaningful wealth buffer; economic shocks hit hardest - Inheritance as wealth driver β†’ **CHALLENGE 5**: knowledge access AND wealth access are intergenerationally transmitted - Homeownership gap (45% vs EU ~70%) β†’ structural driver unique to Germany that inflates measured wealth inequality --- ## Changelog | Date | Change | Reason | |------|--------|--------| | 2026-04-23 | Initial dataset created | Wealth GINI missing from Substrate; BΓΆckler article triggered gap identification |