A total of 64 people from the Chinese mainland made the Forbes magazine list of the world's richest billionaires, coming in second for the first time.
The US led the list, released Wednesday, with 403 billionaires. China was followed by Russia with 62 billionaires. Of the world's 97 new billionaires, 62 were from Asia.
The 24th Forbes list included people from 55 countries and regions, with first entries from Finland and Pakistan.
Chinese entrepreneur Zong Qinghou, CEO of eastern Hangzhou's Wahaha Group, is the wealthiest person in the Chinese mainland, according to the list.
Zong Qinghou, CEO of Wahaha Group. Rank: 103 |
The tycoon, with his $7 billion beverage empire, ranks 103rd in the 2010 world's richest list, while Mexico's Carlos Slim, the son of an immigrant shopkeeper and major stakeholder of the New York Times, claims the top throne with his $53.5 billion fortune.
Slim was $500 million ahead of Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft. Legendary investor Warren Buffet was third with $47 billion.
According to Forbes' counting, the richest person in Hong Kong is Li Ka-sing with a fortune of $21 billion. The richest person in Taiwan is Terry Tai-Ming Gou, founder of one of the world's largest electronics manufacturing service company Hon Hai, with a fortune of $5.5 billion. The world's richest woman, according to Forbes, was Wal-Mart heiress Christy Walton, whose $22.5-billion fortune put her in twelfth place. Only 89 women made it in to the billionaires club, and most inherited their wealth. Of the 14 self-made female billionaires, seven came from the mainland. The number of billionaires increased to 1,011. That's much higher than the 793 super-rich who made in onto the list last year, but lower than the record number of 1,125 in 2008.