Wealth vs Income - interesting perspective

Started by bayonetbrant, October 26, 2015, 11:08:20 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

bayonetbrant

http://isaacmorehouse.com/2015/04/14/why-i-dont-care-about-income-inequality/


Quote



In the 1980's if I told you for only a few hundred dollars anyone could have a $1 million asset in their pocket you'd call me crazy.  But here we are.

The chart above (actually a picture of a chart taken with my iPhone and uploaded to this blog with an app to further emphasize the point) is from the book Bold: How to Go Big, Create Wealth and Impact the World by Peter Diamandis and Steven Kotler.  It illustrates why I think worry about and policy efforts aimed at changing differences in income between rich and poor are dumb, destructive, and miss the point by being stuck in a dead paradigm.

The above chart only scratches the surface.  It's hard to comprehend just how much wealth (not income) we have today compared to 20, 30, or 50 years ago, let alone a century or two ago.  Anyone who complains that income gaps are growing misses the miracle under their nose of wealth exploding, and more accessible to individuals at any income level than ever before in human history.  50 years ago, it could take a hefty sum to launch and run a basic advocacy organization, for example.  You would need a secretary, long-distance phone line, office space, filing cabinets, a travel agent, a print shop that you'd have to visit to approve runs of literature (at least several thousand at a time), space to store them, shipping cost, etc. ad nauseum.  Today you can setup a WordPress website, bid out for design work on Fiverr or 99 Designs, get VistaPrint to run a few hundred after proofing a digital copy, book your own travel, store your own files, run email campaigns with MailChimp, etc. ad nauseum for a few hundred bucks.

Anyone can write and record songs, publish books, start businesses, sell goods and services, learn anything in the world, or meet people across the globe for free or close to it with a phone and some WiFi.  These things are equally accessible to rich and poor.  Wealth – as measured in opportunities and fulfilled desires, the real end of money – is greater than ever and flatter than ever.

The biggest obstacles are those erected by the wealthy to stymie competition from upstarts taking advantage of all this accessible capital.  Licensing requirements, regulations, wage laws, tax laws, immigration restrictions, intellectual monopoly status on non-scarce resources, and subsidized education and idleness are the biggest hurdles to the poor seizing the newly available wealth and creating a better life.  It's not about income or even net worth.  It's about what you can do and the value you can create and consume.  The chart above and the world around us indicate that there has never been a more broad and deep spread of wealth.

GDP doesn't matter.  Neither does income.  Opportunity matters.  Value matters.  Times have never been better across the board, which is exactly what most threatens those precariously perched at the perceived top.  Don't worry about them.  Let the doomsayers and wannabe warriors of equality clamber for an illusive goal that doesn't make anyone better off.  Take advantage of the exponential growth in opportunity all around you.
The key to surviving this site is to not say something which ends up as someone's tag line - Steelgrave

"their citizens (all of them counted as such) glorified their mythology of 'rights'...and lost track of their duties. No nation, so constituted, can endure." Robert Heinlein, Starship Troopers

Con

I think the argument is a bit specious.  Those costs are under assumption that these are monopolies with no competitive offerings which is exactly what regulations help break up

Con

LongBlade

All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

mirth

"45 minutes of pooping Tribbles being juggled by a drunken Horta would be better than Season 1 of TNG." - SirAndrewD

"you don't look at the mantelpiece when you're poking the fire" - Bawb

"Can't 'un' until you 'pre', son." - Gus

LongBlade

<puts on less snarky hat>

It's not really a specious. This gets to the heart of a discussion of poverty, both locally and globally.

In the US, with a few exceptional cities, it is impossible to function without an automobile. In Europe that isn't really the case, and in most parts of Africa automobiles are luxuries, if not burdens to someone without access to large amounts of wealth.

Some of the free wealth listed above seems of questionable value, like video conferencing, unless you recognize how to leverage it. There is already proof of how some poor people are using this revolution in technology and communication to lift themselves out of poverty. There is an entire garage industry of rappers recording and selling their music, some of whom are making it big, almost all of whom are doing so outside of the traditional path to wealth in the music industry.

That they are financing this career with drug money is a different issue. But to the savvy entrepreneur new tech has opened new paths to successful careers.
All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.