Envy of the rich is one of
the most dastardly things lefties do. Chief Executives get lambasted for
earning too much; millionaire innovators are the scourge of society, and the
top few dozen richest people on the planet are thorns in the flesh of the
dim-witted social justice warriors holding placards in central London bemoaning
the 'injustice' of the wealth gap, and the 'greed' of the rich.
To see why the leftist
antipathy is misjudged, you only need to consider the question of what you personally
would need to do to be rich. Think for a few moments. If you don't have the
skills and experience required to earn a big salary, you are going to need to
come up with something that society wants on a large scale. Have a think ....
Did you manage to think of a way of making yourself rich yet? I suspected not. It is not very easy to produce a good or service that masses of people value more than it would cost you to produce, especially as your venture would involve large start up costs and initial risk and foresight.
The reality is, very few
people possess the creative nous to become millionaires, let alone
billionaires. That is why, when lefties whinge about rich people, I suspect the
subtext is that they are really bemoaning their own lack of entrepreneurial
talent - it's an underhanded lament at what others can do better than them.
I'm not rich, but I
greatly value the contributions of the likes of Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Mark
Zuckerberg and countless others. Lefties value them too; they just forget that
they do. Because, you see, that is what is great about the market. Jeff Bezos
has got rich from being an Amazon shareholder, but the combined riches of the
Amazon customers have become even richer once you aggregate the lower prices and
consumer surpluses they've enjoyed.
The more competition there
is in the market, the more benefits go to the consumer. Rich people like Jeff
Bezos and Bill Gates don't just make themselves wealthier; they increase the
wealth of the average person in society too. Think how fortunate you
are (as am I) to live in a society in which you are made so well off despite
not having the entrepreneurial prowess to make large sums of money. I'm typing
this on a laptop, sharing it on the Internet, surrounded by luxuries that my
grandparents would have found astonishing - and for a lot of these luxuries, it
is rich, creative, innovative risk-takers I have to thank. On top of that, we should all be thanking each other too - after all, no single person does anything, even make a pencil, without the help of everyone else.
Finally, some lefties
think that typical workers are being exploited by the rich executives that run
their companies. A basic understanding of economics would tell them that this
is untrue: for as long as there is enough freedom in a marketplace to allow
competition to operate, every worker is paid their marginal product - which is
to say, they are paid what their labour is worth to the firm.
The upshot to all this is
that the Corbynites have got their whole political mandate wrong. No country,
or group of citizens, has ever risen to its material feet by bringing richer
people down. Poorer people, whether that's someone on the dole in Newcastle , or someone at the subsistence level in Nigeria , only
rise to increased prosperity by creating something they can trade - an
invention, a service or their labour.
No injection of material prosperity or economic growth is created through redistributing wealth from top to bottom. Yes, of course, redistributive measures are fine as a safety net to help society's most vulnerable, and for public goods like defence and the rule of law - but those who see the transfer of capital through confiscation as an envy-driven vehicle for levelling society are both uninformed and misguided.
No injection of material prosperity or economic growth is created through redistributing wealth from top to bottom. Yes, of course, redistributive measures are fine as a safety net to help society's most vulnerable, and for public goods like defence and the rule of law - but those who see the transfer of capital through confiscation as an envy-driven vehicle for levelling society are both uninformed and misguided.
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