Okay, so let's analyse what would happen if 1% owned as much as 99%.They didn't create it in a vacuum and at some point if they're given too much everything will collapse anyway (the economy needs people wealthy enough to buy the stuff rich businessmen produce). So, try to imagine what a society where 99% of people are forced to share just 1% of the wealth would look like or how that would even be sustained. I mean, really. — Baden
Yeah, their wealth is not affected. The bottom 99% are as rich as they ever were, in fact they're somewhat richer than they were 200 years ago. And the economy needs both low-value transactions in high volume (selling to the middle class, poor, etc.) and high-value transactions in lower volume (selling to the rich, other businesses, etc.)the economy needs people wealthy enough to buy the stuff rich businessmen produce — Baden
It doesn't disproportionately benefit the wealthy, if by that you just mean that the wealthy own more of the newly created wealth than the others.What would the 1% do if the bottom 99% didn't work for them, purchase their products or services, pay their portion of taxes to help perpetuate the system which disproportionately benefits the wealthy, etc.? — Erik
This is nosense. Yes, without other people on Earth, the entrepreneur would have no one to help. But that's not saying much. The entrepreneur isn't aided one iota in actually helping those people by their mere existence. It's his ingenuity and effort that is of help. The entrepreneur identifies and solves society's problems.without the latter group the former would not have been able to achieve what they have — Erik
It's not boundless greed. To make money you need to solve problems that others have. You're not just going to give me your money, but on the other hand, if, say, I help you make $10,000, you don't mind giving me $1000. Or if I help you get your health back, etc.Ayn Randian justification of boundless greed — Erik
The entrepreneur doesn't need to feel gratitude, he is already helping his society by his very existence - providing needed services and products to millions of customers.I'd imagine that being ridiculously rich and generous aren't mutually exclusive, and that one can be financially successful while also feeling a sense of gratitude and indebtedness to the larger community to which one belongs. — Erik
It obviously depends on the individual.I'd question whether there's strong link to be found between personal happiness/well-being and a thriving economy — Erik
Why is it disgusting? :s Again, if they create that wealth, who should own it? The people who keep a finger up their nose expecting money to fall from the sky in their lap? :sas disgusting as it is — StreetlightX
Could you provide examples of what you mean? I don't find this to be the case. Most billionaires, for example, are self-made, and they don't come from rich families. Nobody stops you from providing a useful product or service, so how are the means of wealth creation kept away from middle-class people like us? More like most of us are too lazy to be interested in doing something useful at a large scale, including dealing with all the complexities that involves. But how are the mechanisms of wealth creation kept away from us? :sIt's that that wealth is used to entrench the means of wealth creation in that bracket while keeping that means out of the hands of the 99%. — StreetlightX
Most billionaires, for example, are self-made, and they don't come from rich families. — Agustino
In 2004, we had 59% of the Forbes 400 having made their own fortune, as opposed to 41% who inherited it.
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Thus, the most encouraging results come from this year’s Forbes 400. For the first time in our data set, we see the number of self-made billionaires who rose from nothing, and overcame various tough obstacles, outpacing those that just sat on their fortunes. A total of 34 billionaires, or 8.5%, scored as 10s, or more than three times as many as in 1984. The number of 100% inherited fortunes as a percentage of the total fell to 7%, with 28 billionaires in the 1 category, compared to 99 back in 1984.
Nobody stops you from providing a useful product or service, so how are the means of wealth creation kept away from middle-class people like us? More like most of us are too lazy to be interested in doing something useful at a large scale, including dealing with all the complexities that involves. But how are the mechanisms of wealth creation kept away from us? — Agustino
It doesn't disproportionately benefit the wealthy, if by that you just mean that the wealthy own more of the newly created wealth than the others. — Agustino
This is nosense. Yes, without other people on Earth, the entrepreneur would have no one to help. But that's not saying much. The entrepreneur isn't aided one iota in actually helping those people by their mere existence. It's his ingenuity and effort that is of help. The entrepreneur identifies and solves society's problems. — Agustino
It's not boundless greed. To make money you need to solve problems that others have. You're not just going to give me your money, but on the other hand, if, say, I help you make $10,000, you don't mind giving me $1000. Or if I help you get your health back, etc. — Agustino
Yes, but most people can succeed if they know what to do. Now knowing what to do isn't easy. Most people have completely wrong notions about business, so I'm not surprised when I hear most businesses fail.Despite what your teachers might have told you in school, it isn't just about effort. 9 out of 10 start-ups fail. The idea that just about anyone (or most people) can succeed if they just try hard enough is ridiculous. — Michael
Trust me, analytically challenged or blind is definitely not what I am. That should be measured by practical results you get not the postmodernist books you read. Anyone can read books and spew out a bunch of theories. But not everyone can get practical results.blind or analytically challenged. — StreetlightX
All these are the result of poor individual choices if you ask me. For example, people are taking on debt to finance housing purchase etc. because they don't understand how it works. Even in Eastern Europe a lot of young people are accumulating a lot of debt to finance housing purchases - why? Because they're happy they get their own house immediately, but do not understand how variable interest rates function - they don't see how inflation will go up, and how the amount they'll end up paying for the house is a LOT more than what the bank initially presents them. But if they lived with parents for say 10 years until they could afford a house by saving money, they would escape from having to use bank debt. Or they could buy a cheaper house outside the main cities. Nothing that cannot be fixed with smart individual decisions.It's in the growing precarity of the labour force, the dwindling growth of workers incomes, the systematic dismantling of labour laws, the offshoring of manufacturing, the watering down of social support, the wild growth of monopolies across all sectors along with all the antitrust issues that entails, the explosion of incarceration rates of the poor and the ethnic, the unparalleled growth of household debt (in the West at least), the wildly differential means of access to education, insurance, and social networks, the ongoing war against progressive tax mechanisms, the ongoing privitaization or dereliction of public resources (driving up costs for the poor), the use of austerity measures to devastate and keep down entire national economies, the use of IP to suppress newly emerging market-players - and plenty more. — StreetlightX
That's a good thing.ongoing war against progressive tax mechanisms — StreetlightX
All these are the result of poor individual choices if you ask me — Agustino
Yes, that's the only thing I would agree on. The government shouldn't serve the interests of entrenched corporations through corruption or laws the prevent competition.Sure it can, especially if the wealthy infiltrate the political system and affect policy. — Erik
Look, that's only because people have the wrong expectations. You are only paid if you are useful, and that holds as much for the entrepreneur as for everyone else. If you keep doing the same job your entire life, without on the side always studying and expanding your skills, you may indeed wake up one day out of work and in a terrible situation, lacking other skills, and not having a job either. That's true. And there are many people I've met who are precisely in this condition. But all this could have been avoided had they dedicated themselves to self-improvement during many many previous years.Automation, for example, may help entrepreneurs cut labor costs and become more efficient but it also hurts certain groups of people that have lost their livelihoods as a result of advanced technology. — Erik
There are indeed winners and losers, but you lose because you don't play your cards right. You don't lose because of a systematic issue.There are winners and losers here, even when judged strictly according to economic considerations, and if we factor in other long-term criteria then it would seem to become an even more complex topic. — Erik
Marketing isn't about that though. That's another common misconception. Marketing is about communicating, honestly, to prospects what problems they have, and what products can solve their problems. Raising awareness about pain-points is just as important as showing what the solution for them is. If you don't know you have a problem you won't buy the product that could solve it.I'd also maintain that a large work force and consumer would seem necessary for peddling the products and services that the visionary entrepreneur was able to create. Let's not forget the tremendous amount of money that goes into creating needs through advertising, often through extremely sophisticated and manipulative psychological means. — Erik
Does anyone force you to watch porn though? No, that's your decision. But obviously developing porn is also unethical - but there is a demand for it. I wouldn't personally ever get involved in unethical businesses, and wouldn't mind, for that matter, if we were to ban such businesses.That's great, sincerely, but what about creating a smart phone or a highly addictive website (e.g. Facebook, porn) or some other thing which may impact on your life and health adversely, in such a way that you become more isolated form others, less physically active, more prone to feelings of depression and suicide, etc. — Erik
Analytically challenged who can probably solve a practical problem 4 times as fast and better than you can :-} Of course, it's easy to show off and insult others when there's no real standard, and real interaction with reality, to compare our results with.Analytically challenged it is. — StreetlightX
Who created wealth for the past 200 years? Only a handful of industrious people. — Agustino
Monetary value in and of itself is irrelevant. Production and problem-solving are relevant.what kind of human activity generates the biggest changes in ownership of monetary value? — fdrake
The stock exchange and the financial sector are very different. The financial sector is much much larger. But I take it you don't know much about this... clearly.This is hands down the stock exchange or financial sector. — fdrake
Yeah, actually roughly 66 trillion euros - not that it means anything. You actually don't understand matters very well if you think stock trades are the figure you should quote. You should quote forex markets. Every single day approximately $5 trillion USD exchange hands on the forex market - meaning approximately $1800 trillion per annum.Worldwide, in total about 60 trillion Euros are traded in stock exchanges per year. This is more than the combined monetary value of all goods and services bought in a year worldwide. See here for World Bank data on the subject. — fdrake
>:O No, you clearly don't have a clue what you're talking about. If you think most of today's fortunes were created by trading stocks or financial speculation, then you're wrong. Most of the people who get rich do so through starting and running a business, which produces something useful for society that other people need or want.It's interesting at this point to note that the idea 'those who demonstrate consistent skill and utility to their communities are reward financially', that Agustino said, is pretty much bunk considered under this light. — fdrake
Sure, so what? They're not where the real money is.The majority of US stock traders are worse than chance at their job, but are disproportionately rewarded to the tune of a wage equal to about twice the median income in the US. — fdrake
>:O >:O investment in stocks is the game that generates the most wealth? >:OWho actually has the money to invest in stocks, to play the game that generates most wealth? — fdrake
Right, but that's how money is accumulated in the first place, by solving problems for society or providing needed products or services. You wouldn't pay me unless I provide you with something useful.You seem to think that those who are the most successful at accumulating enormous wealth are motivated, not by accumulating an ever greater fortune for themselves, but by benign, or even beneficent, desires, such as the wish to solve problems and help people. — Janus
Sure, I don't think that would be a problem so long as the respective billionaire gets to decide how that additional money is to be invested for the public's benefit. But, on the other hand, if invested for the public benefit really means that the billionaire gives over control to some corrupt or incapable government bureaucrat to decide how to invest the money on his behalf, I think that's a problem.So, if there were a cap on personal wealth accumulation, and anything earned above that had to, by law, go back into the public purse, do you think the billionaires would remain motivated? — Janus
I think there comes a point though when more money doesn't make a difference in terms of personal power. If you have $100 million, you're pretty much as powerful as someone who has $20 billion for the most part. There's not much you can do in terms of personal power with more money. So I don't think personal power can be a source of motivation beyond that level.If those who accumulate great wealth are motivated mostly just by the desire to create great wealth (and the power that comes with that) for themselves, do you think that such a situation is morally acceptable and should be tolerated, or even encouraged? — Janus
If those who accumulate great wealth are motivated mostly just by the desire to create great wealth (and the power that comes with that) for themselves, do you think that such a situation is morally acceptable and should be tolerated, or even encouraged? — Janus
>:O No, you clearly don't have a clue what you're talking about. If you think most of today's fortunes were created by trading stocks or financial speculation, then you're wrong. Most of the people who get rich do so through starting and running a business, which produces something useful for society that other people need or want.
Financial speculation and trading stocks, etc. is only a way for rich people to maintain their wealth and avoid having inflation eat it up - once they are already rich. Having said that, I am actually opposed to financial speculation since it doesn't produce anything useful. So I wouldn't mind taxing PROFITS (definitely at least short-term profits) from that at 90%.
Sure, so what? They're not where the real money is.
You seem to confuse the passivity of growing a sum of money through financial investments with the ability to generate wealth. Financial speculation generates no wealth, since it produces nothing. Wealth is generated when products or services are sold. People who are already rich use financial investments not because they're so great at producing wealth, but because they're passive - they take relatively little effort when compared to, say, starting a business.
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