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| Zong Qinghou, chairman of Hangzhou Wahaha Group Co., is China's richest man | 
Many of China's richest people 
have grown poorer over the past year and the number of its US dollar 
billionaires has fallen for the first time in seven years, according to 
the Hurun Rich List, which tracks Chinese wealth.
In its annual report on 
China's super-wealthy, released on Monday, Hurun said China had 251 
people worth $1bn or more, down 20 from last year but still sharply up 
from 2006, when there were just 15. And for the first time since Hurun 
began publishing the list in 1999, property lost pride of place as the 
sector that generates the most wealth.
Nearly half of the 1,000 
richest people in China saw their wealth shrink in the past year, 37 of 
them by more than 50 per cent. The average wealth of the top 1,000 also 
fell 9 per cent to $860m, at a time when growth in the Chinese economy 
has also decelerated, the property market has declined and the stock 
market has fallen sharply. Chinese GDP growth hit a three-year low of 
7.6 per cent year on year in the second quarter of this year.
Heading this year's list 
with a fortune of $12.6bn was Zong Qinghou, of beverage company Wahaha, 
who reclaimed the top spot he lost last year to Liang Wengen, co-founder
 of machinery company Sany. Mr Liang fell to fifth place this year.
In second place is Wang 
Jianlin, with wealth of $10.3bn, founder and chairman of property 
developer and cinema operator Dalian Wanda Group, which recently bought 
AMC Entertainment in one of the biggest recent overseas acquisitions by a
 Chinese company.
Rupert Hoogewerf, Hurun 
report chairman and chief researcher, said that despite the 
"bloodletting" this year, "it is worth remembering that these 
entrepreneurs are still up 40 per cent on two years ago and almost 10 
times 10 years ago". And though the cut-off to make the list fell 9 per 
cent to $290m, that was three times the cut-off of five years ago, he 
said.
Despite signs that the 
slowdown in the Chinese economy is hitting manufacturing output, 
manufacturing took over as the sector that generates the most Chinese 
wealthy, with over with 20.7 per cent of those on the list.
Seven of those on the 
list are not just rich but politically powerful as well: they have been 
named as delegates to the 18th Party Congress, expected to take place 
sometime next month, including Mr Liang. CNN

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