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Concordia University study aims to understand the wealthiest one per cent

Click to play video: 'Lives of the 1 per cent'
Lives of the 1 per cent
WATCH ABOVE: Assistant professor of management at Concordia University's John Molson School of Business, Robert Norsan, dropped by the Global News Morning studio to talk about his study on the U.S. 1 per cent – Nov 2, 2016

Robert Nason, an assistant professor of management at Concordia University‘s John Molson School of Business (JMSB), had one thing in mind when he decided to study the wealth of the U.S.’ top one per cent: find out who they are.

READ MORE: Pity the rich? Canada’s wealthiest see their take shrink: StatsCan

“The one per cent becomes a central figure in public policy, in media narratives and public in general,” Nason said.

“What we want to do is take a data-driven approach to look at who are the one per cent. We used this really good data of U.S. households from the survey of consumer finance collected by the federal reserve and that allows us to [break down] the wealth of the one per cent.”
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READ MORE: Here’s what we know about Canada’s highest-earning 1%

The purpose of the study, which was co-authored with Michael Carney, is to take a closer look at economic equality and how to create effective policies to remedy the gap between the one per cent and the rest of the population.

“There’s this kind of caricature of who the one per cent are and I think having a more authentic perspective is something that’s valuable,” Nason said.

“We found that a lot of the wealth of the one per cent is concentrated in businesses and, to me, that’s a more productive asset than just sitting on cash or gold.”

MORE: Canada’s middle class richest in the world, report says

Nason added the baby boomer generation has the highest ratio of the population belonging to the one per cent.

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