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Castles in France...islands in the Caribbean...private jets.... With a collective wealth of $1.27 trillion at their disposal, the members of the Forbes 400 could buy almost anything, business magazine Forbes said about its annual ranking of America's 400 richest persons.
The collective wealth of the richie-rich club has, however, declined from $1.57 trillion.
The individual fortunes of many Forbes 400 members are as big as some of the world's economies, the magazine noted.
Let's take a look at some of these super-rich entrepreneurs...
Bill Gates, America's richest man with a net worth of $50 billion, has a personal balance sheet larger than the gross domestic product of countries including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Bolivia and Uruguay.
"The Microsoft visionary's nest egg is just short of the GDP of Tanzania and Burma," Forbes added.
The publication further said that one of the Forbes 400 members - New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg - actually runs "a small chunk of a state in an official capacity."
"While he is busy serving as the chief executive of New York City and grappling with its sluggish economy, his own personal balance sheet ($17.5 billion) -- amassed through financial information services and media company Bloomberg LP -- equals the value of all the goods and services produced in South Africa's Republic of Zambia's."
Land developer Donald Bren's assets throughout the vicinity of Orange County, include 475 office buildings, 115 apartment communities, 41 retail centres, resort properties and new housing.
Bren with a net worth of $12 billion, could, in theory, buy Haiti's economy.
Hedge fund expert David Shaw's $2.5 billion net worth parallels Belize's marketplace.
Although philanthropist and art collector Eli Broad's fortune suffered because of AIG's collapse last fall--his wealth ($5.4 billion) rivals Barbados' economy.
Broad is well known for his philanthropy and extensive art collection.
He is also a founder of the financial giant SunAmerica, now a subsidiary of the American International Group.
Investor John Paulson amassed much of his fortune by exploiting the real estate bubble and shorting the subprime market in 2007.
Paulson's net worth of $6.8 billion is equivalent to Montenegro's gross domestic product.