Study Shows Americans Own 40% of World’s Guns

U.S. citizens possess some 40 percent of the world’s firearms, despite making up only about 4 percent of the global population, according to a recent study.

The Geneva-based Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies published the findings of its 2017 Small Arms Survey on Monday, reportedly based on various sources, including civilian firearms registration data from 133 countries and territories and poll responses from 56 countries. The results appeared to show more than 1 billion firearms in the world, nearly 85 percent of which were owned by civilians, defined as those not active members of any law enforcement agency or military.

Of the 857 million civilian-owned guns noted, 393 million could be found in the U.S., a country of just over 325.7 million people in a world of about 7.6 billion. The U.S. was the only country on the list with more guns than people and had more than the next 25 countries combined as the Agence France-Presse reported.

The U.S. had more than five times the guns counted in runner-up India, whose civilians claimed 71.1 million firearms. The U.S. also had nearly eight times more than China, the world’s most populous country, and home to about 49.7 million guns in civilian hands. The U.S. rate of 120.5 civilian firearms holdings per 100 residents also dwarfed war-torn Yemen, which came in second place at 52.8.

The survey detailed extensive methods for documenting civilian firearm figures, especially “with roughly 100 million civilian firearms reported as registered out of some 857 million believed to exist.” The report also noted that “in the United States, for example, there is a growing trend among gun owners to refuse to answer surveys on firearm possession.”

Gun laws have been at the center of U.S. politics for some time, polarizing the two major parties, especially as the country suffers a deadly plague of high-profile mass shootings targeting schools, shopping centers, and other public areas. Democrats have called for tighter regulations against acquiring and possessing firearms, while Republicans—such as President Donald Trump—have dismissed these arguments as attacks on the Second Amendment.

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