WM Market Reports
McKinsey Report Asks How Productively Countries Use Wealth, Flags Risks

The report notes that globally, net worth has tripled since 2000, but the increase mainly reflects valuation gains in real assets, especially real estate, rather than investment in productive assets that drive our economies. The crunch question is how sustainable is this?
Rising asset prices and two decades of relatively low interest
rates have helped expand the world’s “balance sheet” to high
levels, far outpacing underlying economic growth and raising
questions over whether this can endure, a report by the McKinsey
Global Institute said.
The consultancy firm said that net worth in many countries has
risen sharply over the past two decades, but not primarily from
improved underlying economic performance, but more as a result of
rising asset values such as residential property.
“Not only is the sustainability of the expanded balance sheet in
question; so too is its desirability, given some of the drivers
and potential consequences of the expansion. For example, is it
healthy for the economy that high house prices rather than
investment in productive assets are the engine of growth, and
that wealth is mostly built from price increases on existing
wealth?” it said.
The findings of the report highlight how, even more than a decade
on from the financial crash of 2008, there remain worries about
how much of developed countries’ economies depend on high asset
values rather than improvements to underlying economic
performance. With inflation pressures building and likely rises
in interest rates, it creates asset allocation challenges for
wealth managers.
“Across ten countries that account for about 60 per cent of
global GDP - Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan,
Mexico, Sweden, the UK, and the US - the historic link between
the growth of net worth and the growth of GDP no longer holds,”
the report said. “While economic growth has been tepid over the
past two decades in advanced economies, balance sheets and net
worth that have long tracked it have tripled in size. This
divergence emerged as asset prices rose - but not as a result of
21st-century trends like the growing digitization of the
economy.”
“Rather, in an economy increasingly propelled by intangible
assets like software and other intellectual property, a glut of
savings has struggled to find investments offering sufficient
economic returns and lasting value to investors. These savings
have found their way instead into real estate, which in 2020
accounted for two-thirds of net worth,” the report said. “Other
fixed assets that can drive economic growth made up only about 20
per cent the total. Moreover, asset values are now nearly 50 per
cent higher than the long-run average relative to income,” the
report continued.
Strikingly, McKinsey said that for every $1 in net new investment
over the past 20 years, overall liabilities have grown by almost
$4, of which about $2 is debt.
To construct a “global balance sheet,” the firm added up real
assets in the economy as well as all financial assets across all
sectors (including, notably, the financial sector).
The global balance sheet and net worth more than tripled between
2000 and 2020. Assets grew from $440 trillion, or about 13.2
times gross domestic product, in 2000 to $1,540 trillion in 2020,
while net worth grew from $160 trillion to $510
trillion.
Among the ten countries, China accounted for 50 per cent of the
growth in net worth, or wealth, from 2000 to 2020, followed by
the US, at 22 per cent. Japan, which held 31 per cent of the ten
economies’ wealth in 2000, held just 11 per cent in 2020.
The report noted that net worth is a claim on future income, and
historically its growth has largely reflected investments of the
sort that drive productivity and growth, in addition to general
inflation. But the situation over the past 20 years has been
different: net investment as a share of GDP has been low and
declining, particularly in advanced economies, contributing just
28 per cent to net worth expansion. Asset price increases made up
77 per cent of net worth growth.
The report said the “smartest way forward” may be for
policymakers to cut the balance sheet relative to GDP by growing
nominal GDP. To do that, they need to redirect capital to new
productive investment in real assets and innovations that
accelerate economic growth.
“Leaders of financial institutions could seek to develop
financing mechanisms aimed at deploying capital to new growth
opportunities, while limiting debt creation for asset
transactions at ever-rising prices,” the report said.