World’s Wealthiest People, 2022 (30 March 2022)
As of 30 March 2022, with a net worth of roughly $277 billion, Elon Musk is the richest person in the world, followed by Jeff Bezos(No. 2, $194 billion), Bernard Arnault(No. 3, $154 billion); and Bill Gates(No. 4, $135 billion).
Warren Buffett is the fifth-richest person in the world, with $130 billion. Larry Page ranked 6th with a personal wealth of $127 billion, followed by Sergey Brin with $121 billion. Steve Ballmer is placed 8th with a net worth of $110 billion. Larry Ellison($106 billion) occupied the 9th position on the top 10 richest people in the world list, followed by Mukesh Ambani(No. 10, $98.2 billion).
- Elon Musk : $277 billion
- Jeff Bezos : $194 billion
- Bernard Arnault : $154 billion
- Bill Gates : $135 billion
- Warren Buffett : $128 billion
- Larry Page : $127 billion
- Sergey Brin : $121 billion
- Steve Ballmer : $110 billion
- Larry Ellison : $106 billion
- Mukesh Ambani : $98.2 billion
- Gautam Adani : $96.9 billion
- Mark Zuckerberg : $86.9 billion
- Francoise Bettencourt Meyers : $81.3 billion
- Carlos Slim : $78.0 billion
- Changpeng Zhao : $73.1 billion
- Zhong Shanshan : $69.3 billion
- Jim Walton : $66.5 billion
- Rob Walton : $66.0 billion
- Alice Walton : $64.5 billion
- Charles Koch : $59.2 billion
- Julia Flesher Koch & family : $59.2 billion
- Michael Dell : $55.1 billion
- Phil Knight & family : $53.8 billion
- MacKenzie Scott : $53.3 billion
- Amancio Ortega : $50.5 billion
Detailed findings & methodology: CEOWORLD magazine put together a panel of experts to go over data points culled from virtually every reputable wealth tracking media outlet including Bloomberg, The Richest, Money Inc, Cheat Sheet, GO Banking Rates, Celebrity Net Worth, Wealthy Gorilla, Forbes, and more. Based on a consensus from these sources, the final decision for ranking was judged editorially. All data is for the most recent period available. Some were not included in the official statistics for various reasons, primarily due to the lack of necessary data. Just remember, these values and fluctuations are estimations based on a host of variables and publicly available documents. The margin of sampling error for the full data sample is plus or minus 1.2 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that as in all survey research, there are possible sources of error—such as coverage, non response, and measurement error——that could affect the results. All figures in US dollars.
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