Summary
- Some of the global elite rushed to dream homes in the countryside or were whisked away by private jet to seaside retreats.
- Others chose to invest in underground shelters, with Texas-based firm Rising S Bunkers telling the Los Angeles Times that their telephone had been ringing off the hook.
- Their bunker of choice, called the "Aristocrat", includes a gym, sauna, swimming pool, jacuzzi, greenhouse garden and a garage -- all for a cool $8.35 million (£6.6 million, 7.6 million euros).
Stranded on super yachts or confined to their sprawling mansions
worrying about their wine cellars, the world's super rich have invited
ridicule throughout the coronavirus pandemic with their apparent
insensitivity to the plight of ordinary people.
"Sunset
last night... isolated in the Grenadines avoiding the virus. I'm hoping
everybody is staying safe," US media mogul David Geffen wrote on his
Instagram account at the end of March.
Above his message, he shared a picture of a huge yacht sailing in calm waters off islands in the Caribbean.
The
message triggered an avalanche of online indignation over the
inequalities highlighted by the crisis, with Geffen's paradise scene a
world away from the grim spectacle of hours-long food queues elsewhere
in the world.
Some of the global elite rushed to dream homes in the countryside or were whisked away by private jet to seaside retreats.
Specialist company PrivateFly said it had seen a surge in bookings from people wanting to leave at-risk countries, according to The Guardian.
Others
chose to invest in underground shelters, with Texas-based firm Rising S
Bunkers telling the Los Angeles Times that their telephone had been
ringing off the hook.
Their bunker of choice, called
the "Aristocrat", includes a gym, sauna, swimming pool, jacuzzi,
greenhouse garden and a garage -- all for a cool $8.35 million (£6.6
million, 7.6 million euros).
Once hunkered down, the next question for the global glitterati has been how to cope in confinement.
The
Wall Street Journal, daily newspaper of the US business world and a
favourite of the wealthy, wondered on April 16: "For the Rich, A
Dilemma: Quarantine With Staff, or Do Their Own Chores."
The
article cited the manager of a New York finance company who found
himself calling his personnel management agency because he could not get
the bag out of his vacuum cleaner.
"How to spend it",
the weekly glossy supplement of the venerable Financial Times in London,
offered advice to the "problems" faced by its prosperous readers.
It
focused on the renowned London wine merchant Berry Bros. & Rudd,
which sold its entire stock of fine Bordeaux wines at £150 a bottle.
"When
the confinement started, I opened some of my best bottles, as if the
world was going to end," one unfortunate confined to Provence in the
south of France told the magazine.
"I might as well drink them first."
Others
have taken the opportunity to refurbish their wine cellars. Spiral
Cellars, in the upmarket Wimbledon area of southwest London, reported
record-breaking activity.
The FT magazine also stressed
the importance of not letting fashion standards slip, even when trapped
indoors, recommending to readers luxurious dressing gowns from Dolce
& Gabbana and London-based Hamilton and Hare.
Even
in confinement some billionaires have found ways to get richer since the
beginning of lockdown, according to research group Institute for Policy
Studies.
The fortunes of US billionaires increased by
nearly 10 percent to $282 billion between March 18 and April 10, mainly
thanks to the stock market rebound of companies including Jeff Bezos'
Amazon and Elon Musk's electric car manufacturer Tesla.
Some
though are donating to worthy causes, such as Twitter founder Jack
Dorsey, who is giving $1 billion to help fight the pandemic. Bezos has
offered $100 million to US food banks.
But Forbes says
the crisis is beginning to take its toll and has already contributed to a
decline in the number of billionaires worldwide from 2,153 in 2019 to
2,095 in 2020.
"The world's richest people are not immune to the devastating impact of the coronavirus," Forbes journalist Kerry Dolan said.
Forbes'
billionaires list includes for the first time Eric Yuan, founder of the
Zoom videoconferencing application, which has proved very popular
during the homeworking lockdown.
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