Not everyone views the release of the National Business Review's Rich List as our annual chance to celebrate the success of New Zealand business people. Those who frown upon the uber-wealthy among us predictably trot out the findings about the societal perils of economic inequality - as if stripping these people of their millions or billions would instantly sort out the problems of our well-documented underclass.
Proponents of the whole the-rich-get-richer-while-the-poor-get-poorer line would be appalled to learn that the 2011 Rich Listers' combined estimated worth has risen eighteen per cent since last year.
This - coupled with reports in January 2010 that a Tax Working Group discovered that out of a sample of 100 of our wealthiest people only about half were paying the highest tax rate on their income - would surely stick in the craw of many. It's an unfortunate truth that having multiple companies, intricate ownership structures and complicated business arrangements enable efficient tax situations that those working for wages or salaries can only dream of.
Yet a perusal of the Rich List is worthwhile for its inspirational value alone. It's a lesson to all of us that with a great idea, an entrepreneurial spirit, lashings of hard work and more than a modicum of good luck we too could maybe, just maybe, make our fortunes.
Luxury villas in Phuket, island retreats, super yachts, $22-million homes and other trappings of high-net-worth types may be anathema to some, but what caught my eye this year was the scope of the philanthropic work undertaken by many of these individuals and families.