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The Cities With The Most Billionaires

2016-10-10 11 Dailymotion

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1 Moscow Russia
2 New York City USA
3 Hong Kong China
4 London UK
5 Istanbul Turkey
6 Sao Paulo Brazil
7 Mumbai India
8 Seoul South Korea
9 Beijing China
10 Dallas (Tie) USA
10 Paris (Tie) France

Source:
http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-top-ten/cities-with-the-most-billionaires.html

Music : Days Are Long, Silent Partner; YouTube Audio Library

A billionaire, in countries that use the short scale number naming system, is a person with a net worth of at least one billion (1,000,000,000) units of a given currency, usually major currencies such as the United States dollar, the euro, or the pound sterling. Forbes magazine updates a complete global list of known U.S. dollar billionaires every year.[1]

According to the Forbes report released in March 2013, there are currently 1,426 U.S. dollar billionaires worldwide from 66 countries, boasting a combined net worth of $5.4 trillion, which is more than the combined GDP of 152 countries.[2][3] The United States has the largest number of billionaires of any country, with 442 as of 2013, while China and Russia are home to 122 and 110 billionaires respectively.[4][5] Among U.S. billionaires, the average age is 66 years.[6]

A billionaire is a person who has a net worth of at least one billion units of a currency.

Billionaire(s) also may refer to:

Billionaire (card game) or Pit, a commodity-trading card game
"Billionaire" (song), a song by Travie McCoy ft. Bruno Mars
"Billionaire", a song by Peaches from I Feel Cream

1,000,000,000 (one billion, short scale; one thousand million or milliard, long scale) is the natural number following 999,999,999 and preceding 1,000,000,001.

In scientific notation, it is written as "1 × 109".

Previously in British English (but not in American English), the word "billion" referred to a million millions (1,000,000,000,000). However, this is no longer the case, and the word has been used unambiguously to mean one thousand million (1,000,000,000) for some time.[1][2] The alternative term "one thousand million" is rare and is used primarily to ease understanding among non-native speakers of English, as many other languages use words similar to "billion" (e.g. Spanish billón) to mean one trillion (1,000,000,000,000 or a million millions).

In the South Asian numbering system, it is known as 100 crore or 1 arab.

The term milliard can also be used to refer to 1,000,000,000; though "milliard" is very seldom used in English, variations on this name often appear in other languages (e.g. Hungarian (Magyar) milliárd, Indonesian miliar, Polish miliard, Danish milliard, Spanish millardo, French milliard, Italian miliardo, German Milliarde, Hebrew מיליארד, Finnish miljardi, Dutch miljard, Serbo-Croatian milijarda , Russian миллиард, Czech miliarda, Arabic مليار, Romanian miliard, Swedish miljard Norwegian "milliard").

The SI prefix giga indicates 1,000,000,000 times the base unit.

See Orders of magnitude (numbers) for larger numbers; and long and short scales.

The facts below give a sense of how large 1,000,000,000 (109) is in the context of time according to current scientific evidence:

109 seconds is 114 days short of 32 calendar years (≈ 31.7 years).
About 109 minutes ago, the Roman Empire was flourishing and Christianity was emerging. (109 minutes is roughly 1,900 years.)
About 109 hours ago, modern human beings and their ancestors were living in the Stone Age (more precisely, the Middle Paleolithic). (109 hours is roughly 114,000 years.)
About 109 days ago, Australopithecus, an ape-like creature related to an ancestor of modern humans, roamed the African savannas. (109 days is roughly 2.7 million years.)
About 109 months ago, dinosaurs walked the Earth during the late Cretaceous. (109 months is roughly 82 million years.)
About 109 years—a gigaannus—ago, the first multicellular eukaryotes appeared on Earth.
The universe is currently thought to be about 13.8 × 109 years old.[4]
In terms of distance:

109 inches is 15,783 miles (25,400 km), more than halfway around the world and thus sufficient to reach any point on the globe from any other point.
109 metres (called a gigameter) is almost three times the distance from t