The Growing Wealth Gap...Incorrigible People and the Arithmetic of Wealth

Here are some notes from this week's reading. Periodically, I plan on posting similar notes. They are short. They are sometimes cryptic. And they are not fully thought out. But they might provide some useful ideas to the motivated ETR reader. Some of them will emerge as essays, briefs or blogs in the future.

posted by M. Masterson @ 3:54 PM,

3 Comments:

At 4:54 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

interesting thoughts. (and in the 2nd bullet point - when you say "the poor get richer faster", did you mean to say "the rich get richer faster" - which would make more sense in the context?)

 
At 10:42 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Do you believe that, in broad terms, wealth is accrued by the intelligent and ambitious and those who are poor are largely stupid and lazy?

That certainly has not been my experience of the world, though I don't can't cite statistics on the matter. I do know some relatively wealthy people who inherited their wealth and aren't particularly hard working. I also know some smart, hard-working people whose talents and passions didn't happen to lie in a lucrative realm, or who just had a bad break.

(For example, over 50% of bankruptcies in this country come from medical bills, and over 50% of those come those who were covered by health insurance. http://www.nchc.org/facts/cost.shtml. I'm not lazy, but as a young person, I often had to go without health care for financial reasons. A tenth of this nation is does not have health insurance, and I doubt that a full 10% of this nation is simply too lazy or foolish to buy health insurance. If these people become severely sick, they will lose all of their savings.)

I don't think that capitalism always hands people a fair deal. And since, as you noted, human nature is very concerned with relative wealth, an ever expanding wealth gap will likely lead to severe social tension if unchecked. Or do you think that society will tolerate it as the top one percent of the population accrues a greater and greater percentage of the wealth? Will society tolerate it when one percent of the population owns ninety-nine percent of the world's assets? How far will it go?

So, my question is, does a system that rewards those who are born into wealth and punishes those who are not become fair simply because it allows a small minority of truly exceptional individuals to break through and become wealthy?

Or, does the profit motive, like any other powerful natural force, require some checks and balances? We dam rivers, right?

 
At 4:44 PM, Anonymous another Mike said...

Two wrong headed assumptions are always made in the wealth gap argument.

First, that wealthy people were born that way and that is somehow unfair. The facts actually show that over two thirds of wealthy people were born to meager to middle means. Those born to wealth tend to blow their money or have it stolen.

Second, that there is a relatively finite amount of resources and wealth in the world. That means that if a person becomes more wealthy, they are by definition taking it from someone else. Capitalism does reward the success of a business, but rarely to the detriment of society. With the exception of Warren Buffet, most people become wealthy by CREATING capital, not TAKING it. Socialism by definition does not create capital, it merely distributes it.

 

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