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Michelle Taylor's avatar

I think there's a significant difference between rich (relatively well off) and rich (could live to a good standard off their capital).

But I would say that as I have a high income but also still feel worried about money / what happens if I lose my job, have no significant capital other than my primary home (still under significant mortgage) etc.

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Rachael's avatar

With businesses and land, I think the position of the threshold depends on whether it's your only source of income and/or home, or you own it in addition to having a normal income.

Someone with an average job, house, and mortgage is rich if they additionally have, let's say, £500k of savings. So if instead they own a £500k business or £500k of land in addition to their average job/house/mortgage (maybe they inherited it), that feels equivalent, and they are rich.

But if someone owns a £500k working family farm, and it's their home and their only (probably below average) income, and the home and income for several of their family members, then they're not rich. If they sold the farm, they'd have no home, no income, and a pile of cash that they'd burn through in a decade or less (depending on how many people in the family and how frugal they are).

Whereas if someone owns a £500m business, they're rich, even if it is their only source of income, because they could sell it for enough liquid assets that they could live comfortably off the interest/dividends indefinitely and still have generational wealth.

That's my instinct, anyway; I don't know how well it would stand up to rigorous formulation.

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