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Is wealth inequality approaching a tipping point?

nomorelisa

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Is wealth inequality approaching a tipping point?

February 04, 2014 11:50 pm • By MARK BUCHANAN



We know that inequality is on the rise around the world: The richest 1 percent command almost half the planet's household wealth, while the poorest half have less than 1 percent. We know a lot less about why this is happening and where it might lead.

Some argue that technological advancement drives income disproportionately to those with the right knowledge and skills. Others point to the explosive growth in the financial sector. Liberals worry that extreme inequality will tear society apart. Conservatives argue that the wealth of the rich inspires others to succeed.

What if we could shed all our political prejudices and take a more scientific approach, setting up an experimental world where we could test our thinking about what drives inequality? Crazy as the idea might sound, it has actually been done. The results are worth pondering.

Imagine a world like our own, only greatly simplified. Everyone has equal talent and starts out with the same wealth. Each person can gain or lose wealth by interacting and exchanging goods and services with others, or by making investments that earn uncertain returns over time.

More than a decade ago, some scientists set up such a world in a computer, and used it to run simulations examining fundamental aspects of wealth dynamics. They found several surprising things.

First, inequality was unavoidable: A small fraction of individuals (say 20 percent) always came to possess a large fraction (say 80 percent) of the total wealth. This happened because some individuals were luckier than others. By chance alone, some peoples' investments paid off many times in a row. The more wealth they had, the more they could invest, making bigger future gains even more likely.

For those who worry about the corrosive effects of wealth inequality on social cohesion and democracy, the idea that it follows almost inexorably from the most basic features of modern economies might be unnerving. But there it is. A small fraction owning most of everything is just as natural as having mountains on a planet with plate tectonics.

Suppose we reach into this experimental world and, by adjusting tax incentives or other means, boost the role of financial investment relative to simple economic exchange. What happens then? The distribution of wealth becomes more unequal: The wealth share of the top 20 percent goes from, say, 80 percent to 90 percent.

If you keep boosting the role of finance and investment, something surprising happens. Inequality doesn't just keep growing in a gradual and continuous way. Rather, the economy crosses an abrupt tipping point. Suddenly, a few individuals end up owning everything.

This would be a profoundly different world. It's one thing to have much of the wealth belonging to a small fraction of the population — 1 percent is still about 70 million people. It's entirely another if a small number of people — say, five or eight — hold most of the wealth. With such a chasm between the poor and rich, the idea that a person could go from one group to the other in a lifetime, or even in a number of generations, becomes absurd. The sheer numbers make the probability vanishingly small.

Are we headed toward such a world? Well, data from Bloomberg and the bank Credit Suisse suggest that the planet's 138 richest people currently command more wealth than the roughly 3.5 billion who make up the poorest half of the population. Of course, nobody can say whether that means we've reached a tipping point or are nearing one.

Experimental worlds are useful in that they exploit the power of computation to examine the likely consequences of complex interactions that would otherwise overwhelm our analytical skills. We can get at least a little insight into what might happen, what we ought to expect.

Our experimental world suggests that today's vast wealth inequality probably isn't the result of any economic conspiracy, or of vast differences in human skills. It's more likely the banal outcome of a fairly mechanical process — one that, unless we find some way to alter its course, could easily carry us into a place where most of us would rather not be.

Mark Buchanan is a physicist and the author of "Forecast: What Physics, Meteorology and the Natural Sciences Can Teach Us About Economics." He wrote this for Bloomberg View.

http://journalstar.com/news/opinion/editorial/columnists/column-is-wealth-inequality-approaching-a-tipping-point/article_36eaec6b-e55a-5606-8e09-65c5e7815e41.html
 

Leongsam

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I see nothing wrong with wealth inequality.

We have already seen how trying to create equality causes even greater problems.

We should just let the laws of natural selection operate.
 

neddy

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I see nothing wrong with wealth inequality.

We have already seen how trying to create equality causes even greater problems.

We should just let the laws of natural selection operate.

The last time something like this happen, Adolf Hilter came to the 'rescue'.

This time, the Golden Dawn party is spreading their wings to battle the rich.

Remember that western voters vote to maintain their unsustainably comfortable lives.
 

neddy

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China's house of cards

First, who owns the wealth in China? The common assumption is that there is a large and cashed-up middle class in the country, and these middle classes are sufficiently wealthy to transfer some of their capital abroad.

Calling the majority of these cashed-up Chinese buyers the ‘middle-class’ is not really accurate. Using various surveys and methodologies, the general consensus is that the wealthiest 1 per cent of urban households in China (about 2.1 million households or 5.2 million people) have a combined net worth of about $US4.5 trillion. When one traces their liquid assets such as cash, bank savings and stock and bond holdings, the top 1 per cent of urban households own around 30-50 per cent of all such liquid assets in the country.

Incidentally, this group of the richest 1 per cent of urban households is also estimated to own around 30 per cent of all real estate assets in the country. In 2010, all financial and real estate assets were valued at about $US10.5 trillion. This means that the richest 1 per cent of households (2.1 million out of about 530 million households) own 40-50 per cent of the $US10.5 trillion worth of real estate and financial assets in the country.


*** the best days of China have peaked, and the distribution of wealth in the country is really poor compared to during the peak of Japan's economy.
 
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winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
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I see nothing wrong with wealth inequality.

We have already seen how trying to create equality causes even greater problems.

We should just let the laws of natural selection operate.

And we should let everyone have free access to weapons and do away with cops and governments. Let people settle differences and disagreements on their own.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
And we should let everyone have free access to weapons and do away with cops and governments. Let people settle differences and disagreements on their own.

That's pretty much how the world operates right now. Those in power have free access to weapons while the majority have to dance to the tune of their rulers.
 

Macroeconomics101

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That's pretty much how the world operates right now. Those in power have free access to weapons while the majority have to dance to the tune of their rulers.


The U.S. has private militias stocked with high tech weapons and they are capable of launching major attacks on American cities. Major private defence contractors in the U.S. also employ a small standing paramilitary force.
 

extramarital

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Generous Asset
We have already seen how trying to create equality causes even greater problems.

The politicians in most Western countries have been trying to create equal outcome instead of equal opportunity for decades and the results have been disastrous. More businesses are moving their operations overseas due to labor unions demanding higher wages that are not sustainable for the businesses. More illegitimate births from single mothers for them to claim higher welfare benefits from the government instead of working. Government sovereign debt crisis like in Europe as they can no longer afford to service their debts. The upcoming government pension crisis as they can no longer afford to pay retirement benefits to retired government employees.

The results are loud and clear. The utopian society as envisioned by the central planners doesn't work. The end result will a total collapse of society because the system of robbing Peter to pay Paul is unsustainable to begin with. Why should Peter work if what he has worked for will eventually be taken away from him? He will be better off to stop working and claim welfare benefits from the government since the outcome will be equal for all people except the politicians.
 

rushifa666

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Then what is the point of government then, if it is not to care for the weakest in society? should we go back to victorian times where government left the poor to fend for themselves? Should people even pay tax?
 
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