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Oil tanker tycoon Fredriksen tops rich list

Oil tanker tycoon John Fredriksen has once again bagged the top spot of Norway's billionaires list, after increasing his fortune by nearly a third on the back of a recovering shipping market.

Oil tanker tycoon Fredriksen tops rich list
John Fredriksen - Heiko Junge Scanpix
The 69-year-old Cypriot citizen boosted his income from more than 69 billion kroner ($11bn) last year to 90 billion kroner ($15bn) in 2013, Kapital Magazine reported in its annual rich list. 
 
According to the magazine, Norway's 400 richest people are now 100 billion kroner ($17bn) richer than they were in 2012, with the country gaining 144 new billionaires. 
 
This year's biggest change was the relegation of oil rig baron Peter Smedvig from the top ten to make way for shipping magnate Arne Wilhelmsen, and Aker Soltutions owner Kjell Inge Røkke dropping one place to seventh in the list, making way for supermarkets tycoon Stein Erik Hagen.
 
Rank  Name                             2013   2012(position)
1        John Fredriksen             90.0   69.8 (1)
2        Olav Thon                      27.7    25.5 (2)
3       Johan Johannson           26.0    25.3 (3)
4        Odd Reitan                    25.2    24.3 (4) 
5       Johan Henrik Andresen 22.0    18.3 (5)
6       Stein Erik Hagen           13.8    12.4 (7)
7       Kjell Inge Røkke            12.9    12.5 (6)
8       Trond Mohn                   12.2     11.0 (8) 
9       Arne Wilhelmsen           10.2     8.2 (11)
9       Petter Anker Stordalen  10.2     9.3 (9)
 

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MAP: Where are Spain’s richest and poorest towns?

A map charting the average income of people by municipality in Spain reveals a startling north-south divide.

MAP: Where are Spain's richest and poorest towns?
Farm workers in the 'Casa Vieja' shantytown in Nijar, Almeria province, registered as the poorest in Spain. Photo: AFP

While all almost all of the wealthiest towns located in Madrid, Barcelona and the Basque Country, at the other end of the scale, the poorest towns can be found along the coast from Andalusia to Alicante.

The data comes from the National Statistics Office (INE) records from 2016 on municipalities with a population of at least 20,000 people and reveals the average salary per capita.

The data is based on tax returns for 2016 divided over the entire community officially registered as residents on the padron – including children, students, the elderly and unemployed.

Madrid province overwhelmingly dominates the wealthiest zones with 11 municipalities – including the city of Madrid itself – appearing in the top 20. The other towns are all suburbs in the north and northwest of the city.

Barcelona province has three municipalities in the top twenty – Barcelona city, Sant Cugat del Vallés, a suburb to the northeast and the coastal resort of Sitges.

The Basque Country has five in the top twenty; Getxo, San Sebastian, Mondragon, Zarautz and Vitoria-Gasteiz while Galicia has one; Oleiros, a commuter town outside A Coruña.

The interactive map below shows the location of the 20 richest towns in blue and 20 poorest towns in red.

Meanwhile Níjar in Almeria province takes the title of poorest town (above 20,000 population) in the whole of Spain with an average annual salary of €6,253 per head of the population.

But it is joined in the bottom 20 by 13 other towns in Andalusia; three others in Almeria province, two each in Huelva, Seville and Malaga, a further three in Cadiz and one in Granada.

The Canary Islands have two towns among Spain’s poorest; Arona on Tenerife and and La Oliva on the island of Las Palmas.

Four towns in Alicante are included among the poorest; Almoradi, Mazarrón, Torrevieja and Calpe. The latter two are popular with retired Brits whose presence there certainly brings down the average income.

 

 

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