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All the Money in the World: How the Forbes 400 Make--and Spend--Their Fortunes Hardcover – Deckle Edge, September 4, 2007
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From Wall Street to the West Coast, from blue-collar billionaires to blue-blood fortunes, from the Google guys to hedge fund honchos, All the Money in the World gives us the lowdown on, among other things: the all-time richest Americans, who made and lost the most money in the past twenty-five years, the fields and industries that have produced the greatest wealth, the biggest risk takers, the most competitive players, the most wasteful family feuds, the trophy wives, the most conspicuous consumers, the biggest art collectors, the most and least generous philanthropists.
Produced in collaboration with Forbes magazine, All the Money in the World is a vastly entertaining, behind-the-scenes look at today’s Big Rich, a subject of enduring fascination to all Americans.
- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication dateSeptember 4, 2007
- Dimensions6.72 x 1.42 x 9.45 inches
- ISBN-100307266125
- ISBN-13978-0307266125
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Which colleges has the richest grads? Who's richer: East or West? The high (and low) cost of living well The all-time richest Americans
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Review
--Liesl Schillinger, New York Times
"Fascinating . . . Intriguing . . . Full of colorful characters and meticulous research, this book is inspired, insightful and lots of fun."
--Publishers Weekly
"Highly readable and provocative."
--Ron Wynn, Bookpage
"Uncovers a plethora of facts and figures about the superrich. . . goes behind the numbers to study their personalities and psychology, in essence revealing what makes them tick . . . providing enough charts, graphs, and comparisons to satisfy any statistician, and enough gossip on ruthlessness, risk-taking, family squabbles, and scandalous affairs to satisfy the rest of us."
--David Siegfried, Booklist
“Fascinating . . . The text is enhanced by 102 interesting and often humorous sidebars and an alphabetically organized appendix that lists all Forbes 400 members past and present, including each member's number of years on the list, year of highest net worth, and peak net worth.”
--Caroline Geck, Library Journal
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Forbes 400 is the dominant symbol of wealth in America. It recalls the earlier 400 list of Mrs. Astor but differs from hers in one telling respect. Whereas the original 400 referred to the collection of socially prominent New York families who filled the ballroom of Mrs. Astor in the late nineteenth century, the Forbes index spotlights individual wealth. It measures the size of this or that personal fortune. It asks not where you came from or who you work for, but who’s richer? It’s the big-banana index—simple, primal, direct—and for those reasons irresistible.
Malcolm Forbes, a passionate believer in fortune-making, established the list in 1982. There was nothing elitist in his ebullient approach to wealth. Forbes was unashamed by his fortune; he relished the idiosyncratic (and he knew the value of publicity in promoting his brand). His favorite form of transportation was neither the everyman’s Chevy nor the aristocrat’s polo pony, but a motorcycle and a hot-air balloon—both of which kept him and his eponymous magazine, Forbes, in the news. Several years before the creation of the 400 list, Forbes developed a Cost of Living Extremely Well Index (CLEWI), a cheeky riff on a traditional Cost of Living Index, which measures the price of staples. The CLEWI charted the changing prices of yachts, caviar, cigars, and private planes. Similarly, Forbes presented its 400 as celebrities, treating them the way People treated actors or Sports Illustrated home-run hitters. The reported numbers had a kind of celebrity flash: A fortune was a batting average.
It seems remarkable that the Forbes 400 list, today endlessly quoted around the world, is only twenty-five years old. (B.C. Forbes, Malcolm’s father and the magazine’s founder, published a brief precursor of the list in 1918, naming the thirty richest Americans of the time, but it did not take hold.) The Forbes 400 is a particular product of its era, a living reflection of recent history. It captures a period of extraordinary individual and entrepreneurial energy, a time unlike the extended postwar years, from 1945 to 1982, when American society emphasized the power of corporations. The gross domestic product (GDP) in the United States has more than doubled since 1982, and may soon triple. The size of American personal fortunes has more than kept pace. In 1982 only thirteen billionaires were on the Forbes list, and you needed $75 million to make the cut. Today you must be a billionaire. In 1982 the combined net worth of the 400 represented 2.8 percent of the GDP. By 2006 that figure had risen to 9.5 percent. (The percentage actually reached 12.2 percent of the GDP in 2000, during the Internet boom.) More generally, in 2005 the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans claimed a percentage of the national income not equaled since 1928. Only the Gilded Age, the period from the Civil War to the 1890s, and the 1920s can withstand comparison to the last twenty-five years in terms of wealth accumulation.
For many people (not least, before his death, Malcolm Forbes himself) the Forbes 400 represents a powerful argument—and sometimes a dream— about the social value of wealth in contemporary America. In this view, great wealth does not (at least in the United States) suggest an aristocratic or privileged group of people who inherited their positions. It means enterprising individuals, a marvelous meritocracy of money. Those who make fortunes are an ever-changing, ever-churning group of remarkable people who flourish in the land of opportunity. They bring jobs, energy, ideas, and even joy to their society. They have been responsible, in the late twentieth century, for extraordinary advances in technology, the invention of new financial instruments, and the efficient restructuring of American industry. Money is fluid. Money is restless. In 1982 twenty-four Du Pont heirs were among the four hundred wealthiest Americans. By 1999 no Du Ponts remained on the list. New money was supplanting old. It was wealth’s way.
To be sure, many take the other side of the argument. Why commemorate greed, competition, and dollar one-upmanship? What does it say about America that the wealth of four hundred individuals should, in 2006, equal almost one-tenth of the annual output of a nation of 300 million people? To skeptics, the Forbes 400 symbolizes a period of avarice, excess, and selfishness.
All the Money in the World does not join in these arguments. Instead it recounts a more nuanced and personal story. At times anecdotal, at times analytical, All the Money in the World tells the story of the individuals who actually made the money, many of whom were interviewed for the book. Taken together, their stories illuminate how fortunes are made, lost, and spent today. The book is organized into three sections. The first, What It Takes, examines the character of fortune-makers, looking at such factors as risk taking, luck, and education in helping them get ahead. The second, Making It, explores how their money was made, with particular emphasis given to the booming fields of technology, finance, and entertainment and media (while also reporting on the more traditional, so-called blue-collar fortunes). The third, Spending It, looks at what the wealthy do with their money, focusing on conspicuous consumption, heirs, family feuds, and philanthropic and political activities.
All the Money in the World also contains a rich collection of charts and graphs that detail intriguing facts about wealth (many analyzed here for the first time) gleaned from the twenty-five years of the list. A few of the highlights:
• In the first Forbes 400, oil was the source of 22.8 percent of the fortunes, manufacturing 15.3 percent, finance 9 percent, and technology 3 percent. By 2006 oil had fallen to 8.5 percent and manufacturing to 8.5 percent. Technology, however, had risen to 11.75 percent and finance to an extraordinary 24.5 percent.
• With the emergence of new technology-based and financial fortunes, the geography of American wealth has changed. In 1982 New York had 77 members on the list, California 48. Today California has 89 members. (At its peak, before the Internet bubble burst in 2000, California had 107 people on the list.) New York now has 56 members, a decline of 27 percent over the life of the index. But New York City has more 400 members (45) than any other American city. Texas had 65 members on the list in 1982 and 36 in 2006. The flow of fresh money to California is mostly concentrated in Silicon Valley, near San Francisco. In the last twenty-five years, Silicon Valley has joined Wall Street, Hollywood, and the Texas oil patch as a storied and almost mythical source of American riches.
• In the last twenty-five years, 97 immigrants have made the list. Only 13 working women have made the cut, and this small number includes several who began life with substantial advantages, such as Katharine Graham and Abigail Johnson, each of whom inherited a large fortune. (The fortunes of Oprah Winfrey; Martha Stewart; Pleasant Rowland, founder of the American Girl doll empire; and Meg Whitman, the chief executive officer of eBay, are entirely self-made.)
• The average net worth in 2006 of Forbes 400 members without a college degree was $5.96 billion; those with a degree averaged $3.14 billion. Four of the five richest Americans—Bill Gates, casino owner Sheldon Adelson, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, and Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen (whose combined net worth was $110 billion in 2006)—are college dropouts. The fifth, Warren Buffett, has an undergraduate degree from the University of Nebraska—and subsequently got a master’s degree in economics from Columbia University. A broader study of the Forbes 400 over the last twenty-five years indicates that in any given year about 10 percent of the members dropped out of high school, possess only a high school diploma, or never completed college.
While Ronald Reagan wasn’t solely responsible for the historic economic boom reflected in the Forbes 400, there can be little doubt that he created the environment in which the list took root and flourished. Elected to the presidency in 1980, two years before the list was invented, Reagan was in certain respects a characteristic voice of the corporate fifties: After his movie career faded, he became well-known as a spokesman for General Electric (GE) and as the genial program host for its hit television show, General Electric Theater. The United States was developing at this time into a mass society with a vigorous consumer culture. The country had united as never before during World War II, marshaling its industry to defeat a common enemy. In the postwar period its energetic corporations defined what was meant by economic success. The company man (and shareholder) came into his own; it would have seemed selfish, with the Cold War intensifying and memories of the Depression and World War II still fresh, to overemphasize individual riches. The chief executive officers (CEOs) of IBM, General Motors (GM), and AT&T were kings of the American hill.
Nobody better symbolized corporate America than Robert McNamara, a man driven less by his belief in individual glory than by his faith in rational planning and the social utility of institutions. Ford Motor Company had, of course, been founded by the industrialist Henry Ford. That McNamara rather than a Ford heir rose to the top of this legendary family company symbolized the ascendancy of a corporate ideal that appeared to many people of the time at once sensible and visionary. It seemed natural that the young, newly elected president John F. Kennedy would, in 1960, ask a man of the new forward thinking to modernize the military as he might a corporation. What happened to McNamara as secretary of defense during the 1960s—as American culture was shocked in turn by the assassination of a president, a failed war, and the ris...
Product details
- Publisher : Knopf; First Edition (September 4, 2007)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307266125
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307266125
- Item Weight : 1.6 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.72 x 1.42 x 9.45 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,617,944 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,526 in Sociology of Class
- #6,401 in Motivational Management & Leadership
- #7,094 in Business Motivation & Self-Improvement (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book provides a good insight into the lives of the Forbes 400. They describe it as well-written and a great read. The research is well-received and considered a valuable reference.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the book's research and writing quality. They find it well-researched, interesting, and a good reference. The book provides insights into the lives of those on the Forbes 400 list and how they got there. It provides comparisons, statistics, and historical information.
"Very well written and researched. A good insight into the lives of the Forbes 400, how they got there and how they spend their money...." Read more
"Great research about the fortunate 400.....interesting reading you will enjoy how the others live.....those with lots of wealth." Read more
"...It's quite a bit more detailed in terms of comparisons, statistics, historical information than Richistan, however...." Read more
"...because I read the book Richistan and found that well written and very interesting...." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and interesting. They appreciate the author's use of tying events in the text like break-ins. Overall, they describe it as a great read.
"Very well written and researched. A good insight into the lives of the Forbes 400, how they got there and how they spend their money...." Read more
"...I loved the graphs, and what I especially like - authors tie them in text, like a break-ins, so, interupting huge blocks of the text - to make a..." Read more
"A great read" Read more
"...I bought this book because I read the book Richistan and found that well written and very interesting...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2008Very well written and researched. A good insight into the lives of the Forbes 400, how they got there and how they spend their money. Great book if you have a business that targets these people as customers!
I must say this book is also a lot better than those books about how to get rich, this book tells REAL stories. If you are thinking of buying this books have a look at the book RICHISTAN too. They go along very well together!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2008This is a question in fact, why YOU are reading now this. And instead of hoopla review, I want to be helpful, because, maybe next time your review will be helpful to me.
There is one more book that has just about same content, and you must consider it, if you want to buy this kind of reading. Here it is: Richistan: A Journey Through the American Wealth Boom and the Lives of the New Rich
Now, let me list the differences and pros & cons (IMHO of course) of ALL THE MONEY against Richistan.
Pros:
Graphs, Statistics, Numbers, Lists & beyond.
That is what ALL THE MONEY is just affluent of. I loved the graphs, and what I especially like - authors tie them in text, like a break-ins, so, interupting huge blocks of the text - to make a rest of reader. That is great.
Cons:
It's still outsider view. Lo and behold, it is a compilation of facts, who spent what, who lost what and who divorced whom. While author of Richistan, literally hided himself in stealth mode, to see the soul & inside of this world. But again it lacks all the numbers and lists that this book have
What to do? Buy both :)
- Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2009Great research about the fortunate 400.....interesting reading you will enjoy how the others live.....those with lots of wealth.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2011I bought this book because the lives of the rich and famous fascinate me. Part of me, hopes to be like them one day. I would like to know as much as possible about the lifestyle, while I'm dreaming and still reaching for my goal.
My issue with this book is not that the information is slightly out-dated. I expected this because the publication date was a few years old. Personally, I disliked the organization of the information. The first few chapters seem to spew random facts. There are tidbits that are interesting, like when the book talks about stories of how people got their wealth. The stories though are really randomly laid out. I think more work could have been done to filter out what was interesting information and what is just being put in to make this book thicker. This may be because I am a little ADD. You need to concentrate to get info out of this dense text.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2016A great read
- Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2008This book is similar to "Richistan" in nature in that it profiles many wealthy people and how they obtained and spend their wealth.
It's quite a bit more detailed in terms of comparisons, statistics, historical information than Richistan, however.
But again, if you are looking for explicit and detailed information of what you should and shouldn't do to obtain your own wealth you'll want to look elsewhere.
It does give examples of how some of the super rich got their money but that's a fairly small part of the book.
To summarize, the rich got rich by taking advantage of underserved markets by creating businesses, inheritance, finance deals, and sometimes just plain dumb luck.
If you want to know about other rich people and what you can do with your money once you have it then this is a good reference to have.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2016Excellent book!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2007Have you ever wondered what it would be like to earn, spend, and give away billions of dollars without having to think about reining in your whims? That's the way Bill Gates and many other billionaires live now. All the Money in the World takes a look at those who have appeared on the Forbes list of the 400 wealthiest Americans over the last 25 years to see how these billionaires got on the list, what kept them on the list, and what the consequences of their wealth have been for their lives and those of their families.
Malcolm Forbes started this list to show that wealth counts, not inherited position (as the social 400 in New York had once implied). The list has now reached a point of having become an icon in an age of remarkable wealth building. A good part of the book shows how the list itself is beginning to influence the behavior of people who do and don't want to be seen on the list.
The amount of information contained in this book is staggering. In addition to hundreds of vignettes about wealthy individuals and families, there are also lots of lists of who does the most of whatever (earn, spend, divorce, have children, give away money, or own yachts).
You might expect that such a book would glamorize billionaires, but that's not the case. The authors do their best to keep a little distance between the glitz of wealth and power and the reality of what kind of people these are. In many cases, you'll quickly decide you don't like certain people . . . and certainly wouldn't want to use them as a role model.
Other books on the wealthy tend to make them seem like they are superior in many ways, but that's not the reality as this book shows. I was particularly impressed to see that the book contained a discussion of how some piles of money are created by accidental factors. Of those who earned their own wealth (the majority), extreme risk taking was often rewarded when huge increases in prices turned poor cash flow into an asset-based bonanza.
Some of the factoids will fascinate you. Bill Gates had wealth in 2006 greater than the annual GDP of 11 African countries with a combined population of 226 people. The authors also adjust wealth over time by comparing it to GDP in the United States which allows you to compare Bill Gates to John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie. Perhaps the most interesting factoid is that those without much education are worth a lot more money than those with a lot of education. Card players will be intrigued to find out that many fortunes were started from poker winnings.
For those who love gossip, some sections positively reek of gossip.
Here is how the book is organized:
Introduction
Part One: What It Takes
Chapter 1 -- Education, Intelligence, Drive
Chapter 2 -- Risk
Chapter 3 -- Luck and Timing
Chapter 4 -- Winning Is Everything
Part Two: Making It
Chapter 5 -- Blue-Collar Billionaires
Chapter 6 -- West Coast Money
Chapter 7 -- Entertainment and Media
Chapter 8 -- Beyond Wall Street
Part Three: Spending It
Chapter 9 -- Conspicuous Consumption
Chapter 10 -- Heirs
Chapter 11 -- Family Feuds
Chapter 12 -- Giving It Away
Chapter 13 -- Power and Politics
Afterword -- Money and Happiness
I have studied how billion-dollar businesses are created for many years, and have often surveyed wealthy entrepreneurs in that process. In addition, I try to stay up-to-date on what's going on with the wealthiest people as part of my studies for the 400 Year Project. But a great deal of the information in the book (about 30 percent) was new to me. If you are not so focused on the wealthy as I am, you'll probably find more than half of the book will be new to you.
The book is a pretty fast read if you skim over anecdotes you already know.
Have a rich experience!
Top reviews from other countries
Richard JonesReviewed in Canada on March 21, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Item arrived fine, easy problem-free transaction.
All good!
