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This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde
This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde





This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde

But the ever-increasing concentration of money-roughly $85 billion at press time-among the Hub’s wealthiest is a striking trend, particularly as the skyrocketing cost of living shines a spotlight on our ever-widening wealth gap. Twenty-four billionaires in a city of nearly 700,000 might not seem like that many. To come up with the roster of 24 names you’ll find on this list, we partnered with Wealth-X to identify those they consider billionaires and we consider Bostonians. alone closing in on 1,000 of them, according to Wealth-X, an Altrata company, which maintains a proprietary collection of research on the well-to-do. And the number of members in the city’s most exclusive club has only increased over the past few years, in lockstep with global trends: The world’s population of three-comma-net-worth individuals expanded during the pandemic, with the U.S. Several are immigrants or first-generation Americans. Most didn’t have the benefit of family wealth. Today’s local billionaires, in fact, are the farthest thing from your Brahmin ancestor’s merchant magnates.

This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde

What is new is the growth of individual riches in this city, and how the folks who have money got it. The Cabots and the Lowells preceded Fidelity’s Johnson clan, and the Patriots-owning Kraft dynasty has nothing on surnames such as Saltonstall, Forbes, Gardner, Wigglesworth, Amory, and Perkins. In fact, it’s been part of the city’s fabric for centuries. Stunning wealth is nothing new to Boston.







This Little Mommy Stayed Home by Samantha Wilde