The online newspaper "El Semanario without limits", this week presented a note entitled "Fortuna de 201.638 Mexican equivalent to 35% of GDP." GDP is gross domestic product. Seeing the label of the note, I thought of the possibility of knowing what you think of these figures the rest of the Mexicans who are not within the group of 201.638 which owns 35% of the total wealth of the country. I'll never know. For the remaining 106 million Mexicans. I can not go and ask sensibly all. But I can think of other things on this subject that the weekly unlimited shares with his readers and attributes its source to the National Banking and Securities Commission (NBSC). One of those things I think is something worthy of an exclusive, I think (ha!). Continue to learn more with: George Rohr.
It is on the Pareto principle. Vilfredo Pareto was, among other things, an Italian economist who discovered the portion of the distribution of wealth in society. Pareto observed that 20 percent of the population owned 80 percent of the goods and therefore 80 percent of people owned only 20 percent of that wealth. This principle is expected to vary somewhat from society to society. However, in the current example of Mexico we have a singularity (singularity perhaps increasingly common), a phenomenon worthy of the most brilliant thesis in sociology and economics. Doing arithmetic with the numbers above yields the following result: 19 percent! You read that correctly: Nineteen percent point. We can imagine Don Vilfredo tumbling in his grave ochentaycincoanera.
