Who created wealth for the past 200 years? Only a handful of industrious people. — Agustino
A handful of industrious people like (not mentioning all the well known current rich folks)
Samuel Crompton (Spinning Mule) Great Britain
Thomas Newcomen (Steam Engine) Great Britain
Johns Hopkins (commercial, banking, railroads) USA
John D. Rockefeller (Oil) the world
Andrew Carnegie (Steel) USA
Cornelius Vanderbilt (Railroads) USA
John Jacob Astor (Fur, Real Estate (like... Waldorf Astoria Hotel) USA
James Hill (Railroads) USA
Jamsetji Tata (Shipping, Steel, Hotels...) India
Richard Trevithick (Sugar) Germany
Coco Chanel (Fashion) France
Enzo Ferrari (Sports Cars) Italy
J. R. D. Tata (Everything) India
Richard Branson (Media, Transportation) UK
Rod Aldridge (Business process outsourcing), UK
Hernán Botbol (Internet) Argentina
Strive Masiyiwa (Telecommunication) Zimbabwe
Sure, a handful. But... none of these people actually produced much wealth themselves. Andrew Carnegie wasn't shoveling iron ore into the coke ovens; Jamsetji Tata wasn't steering the freighters; Strive Masiyiwa wasn't bolting together cell towers in Zimbabwe.
It just isn't possible for one person to invent and develop large industries which produce millions or billions of dollars of income. Bill Gates and Steve Jobs did start working on computers in their families garages (so they say), but before long they, like other entrepreneurs, had to start hiring people to develop and produce code, pieces of gadgetry, and so on. Generally setting up production (plant and people) requires loaned capital.
You, AGUCORP, sitting at your desk somewhere in Eastern Europe, providing some services to other businesses, are not going to become rich. At some point you will have to start hiring other people to sit at desks, answer phones and emails, and to do this you will need to obtain capital, probably first with a loan, then with maybe selling shares. If Big Finance thinks you have the makings of becoming the Bloomberg of Business in Bosnia, Bulgaria, Belarus, and Botswana, they might back you, then you might become rich.
But no matter how rich Agustino gets as founder of AGUCORP, it won't be on the basis of your personal labor. Your ideas, sure; certainly the ideas of your employees too.
You are too wrapped up in the idea of the Glorious Solitary Knight of Commerce to see that wealth is created socially by dozens, hundreds, thousands, and hundreds of thousands of people working to produce wealth. And then, in order for you to become very, very rich, you have to expropriate a slice of the value all those people created, and keep it for yourself.
You don't have to be a physically powerful ox of a man to personally do the expropriating. Expropriation is a social affair, and the rules of commerce (assuming there are rules of commerce wherever you are operating out of) allow for, and facilitate the expropriation. The armed services of the country you are working in are paid to make sure your employees do not turn on you and seize your business services goldmine (expropriating the expropriators). The Courts are there to make sure that your patents, trademarks, and contracts are protected. The stock markets are there to facilitate your IPO, and various business already exist to facilitate your financial operation.