First list (1982) In the first
Forbes 400 list, there were only 13 billionaires, and a net worth of million secured a spot on the list. The 1982 list represented 2.8% of the
Gross Domestic Product of the United States. The 1982
Forbes 400 had 22.8% of the list composed of oil fortunes, with 15.3% from manufacturing, 9% from finance and only 3% from technology-driven fortunes. The state of
New York had the most representation on the list with 77 members, followed by
California with 48.
2000 In the year 2000,
Forbes 400 saw the highest percent of the gross domestic product represented by the list at 12.2% driven by the internet boom.
2021 By 2021, calculated using stock prices from September 3, 2021, the minimum net worth to make the
Forbes 400 was $2.9 billion; the top billionaire on the list, Jeff Bezos, was worth over $200 billion; and the collective fortunes of the 400 reached $4.5 trillion. In the 39 years since the first list, the minimum net worth to make the list had increased over 38-fold, or 3866% (from $75 million to $2.9 billion), while basic consumer price inflation had risen less than 300% (or less than 3-fold).
Controversies In April 2018, an ex-
Forbes reporter Jonathan Greenberg alleged that
Donald Trump had inflated his actual wealth in order to be included on the
Forbes 400 listing. Greenberg provided original audio recordings of his 1984 exchange with "John Barron", one of the
pseudonyms used by Donald Trump, and eventually included Trump at the end of the
Forbes 400 list at $100 million, one fifth of the $500 million which "Barron" was claiming as Donald Trump's net worth. This figure was later corrected and, following civil proceedings years later, Trump admitted the name was fabricated. ==Self-made score==