Let me make my point with figures from Max's chart.
Let's look at average wealth growth of the top 1% vs the bottom 50%
This is the baseline:
1989Q3 top 1% = 4.88 trillion, bottom 50% = 0.76 trillion
This is the 2007 peak, let's let this represent growth before the GFC:
2007Q3 top 1% = 20.09 trillion, bottom 50% = 1.23 trillion
You can use these figures to work out the average % wealth growth for each group over the 18 years, by working out the factor of the increase and taking an 18-root of that number:
The top 1% gained ~8.18% wealth per year in this period
The bottom 50% gained ~ 2.71% wealth per year in this period
So, you can see from these figures that the 1% were gaining wealth in percentage terms 3 times as fast the bottom 50%, for the 18 years up until the crash.
So let's look at the 2019 figures, and work out who gained the most from the 2007 peak to now. This will give a fair indication of the effects of both the crash and recovery.
2019Q2 top 1% = 34.73 trillion, bottom 50% = 2.02 trillion
Calling that 12 years , the rich gained wealth at 4.67% per annum in this period, which is nearly half the rate they were gaining in the 18 years from 1989 - 2007. Meanwhile, the poor went from 1.23 trillion to 2.02 trillion, a factor of ~1.64, which on a yearly basis is a gain of 4.22%, so wealth-growth for the bottom 50% has actually accelerated.
So, the top 1% now gain about 4.67% wealth per year vs the bottom 50% on 4.22%, instead of the old 8.18% to 2.71%. This is my point. There really isn't evidence that they've done "better out of the recovery" than the bottom 50%. Pulling down the house of cards ends up being a leveler.