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by avalys 1373 days ago
When Amazon stock goes up by 10% and Jeff Bezos' net worth goes up by $16 billion, where did that money come from? Who did he take it from? Where did those dollars come from?

Trick question! There is no money, no dollars. This is purely notional value, and you can't feed or house or decontaminate anyone with it.

And that's the problem with your statement. Most "billionaires" are billionaires because they (or, yes, their grandparents) built an incredibly successful organization which is now "worth" multiple billions and they still own some of it. But they didn't become billionaires by taking dollars from other people - they became billionaires by creating this value literally out of thin air, taking it from no one and depriving no one of housing.

Consider these two scenarios:

Person A is a sleazy businessman and manages to insert himself as an intermediary in every financial transaction in the US through bribing legislators. Over the course of a few years, he extracts $6 from every citizen of the US while paying only $20M in bribes. Yes, this person now has literally $2B in dollars, and I agree he is a policy failure.

Person B is a scientist who develops an idea for a more efficient airplane engine. He obtains venture capital funding and starts a company. 10 years later, he retains 25% ownership of the company, which is selling jet engines to Airbus and doing $500M per year in revenue on $450M in expenses. He re-invests the profits in R&D and employs thousands of people. The accountants say he could sell his company to GE for $5B.

Person B does not have a billion dollars, yet the media would characterize them as a "billionaire". This person is not a policy failure.

We should make it harder for Person A to exist. We should make it easier for Person B to exist.