(Drivebycuriosity)
 - It seems that the media is obsessed with income inequality. There is a
 deluge of articles about the "rising inequality" in the US and Europe. 
Often I read the rant "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer". And
 Thomas Piketty’s inequality bible "Capital in the Twenty-First Century"
 is on the top of the bestseller lists.
I believe that the obsession with other people`s wealth (bloomberg)
 is merely a media hype. Julia Roberts charges $20 million per movie and
 so do Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert Downey Jr. and other Hollywood stars  (thedailybeast  hollywood businessi). So what? The golf player Tiger Woods earns $61 million a year and has made $1.3 billion in his career (forbes).
 Football, soccer and baseball stars also collect huge amounts of money.
 I don´t see any complaints about the outrageous rich Hollywood stars 
and sports celebrities in the media. The public seems to see just the 
wealths of company CEOs and the huge bonuses and fees collected by 
top-bankers and hedge fund managers. 
Julia Roberts, 
Robert Downey Jr. & Co. are paid tons of money because their 
employers - the Hollywood studios  - believe that these superstars can 
attract so many movie goers that they will gain more money than they 
spend for these actors. The names of some megastars can create 
blockbusters (but not guarantee them of course). Even "underpaid" 
supporting actors and the rest of the cast could benefit when they 
participate in a major movie besides some mega--stars because they gain 
reputation.
Advertisers and owners of sports teams pay 
Woods & Co. extremely high sums because they believe that the sport 
stars will fill their cashes. Investors grant the CEOs of their 
companies extremely high bonuses because they hope that the company 
leaders raise the value of their stocks more than they cost. Since Apple
 CEO Tim Cook started his job the market capitalization of the company 
doubled to a record $700 billion ( cnbc) (even that the rally had more causes of course).
Many
 liberals claim that inequality is not simply unfair but harmful. I 
don`t agree. Do you and I get poorer when Mrs. Roberts, Mr. Woods & 
Co. inflate their banking accounts? I don`t think so. I  don´t believe 
that the wealth of the majority will shrink even when some people get 
absurdly rich and the number of billionaires rises. Quite contrary, a 
high & rising inequality might even be necessary for economic growth
 and therefore create more wealth for everyone.
Capitalistic
 countries with a high income inequality like the US, Switzerland, 
Singapore, Hong Kong and others have been growing much faster than their
 more equality balanced neighbors and their average populations are 
wealthier than the 
citizens of the rest of the world. The US for instance has a higher 
income inequality then France, but the US economy does better than the 
French. The US might have more billionaires then France (relative to the
 whole population) but  the US  unemployment rate dropped to 5.5% while 
the French unemployment rose to 10.4%, the highest reading since 1998. 
Countries with the highest equality - Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea -  
also belong to the poorest nations in the world.
                                                      
                                                       The Big Historic Experiment 
In
 the last century a gigantic economic experiment happended: A whole 
country got divided  in 2 different parts. One part was communistic 
organized, with a low income inequaltity, the other 
became capitalistic, with a high inequaltity. After around 40 years the 
experiment got aborted. Guess in
 which part the masses (average population) got much richer and in which
 the average citizen stayed poor?
The experiment was 
the division of Germany into the (more or less) capitalistic Western
 Germany (Bundesrepublik Deutschland) and the communistic part (Deutsche
 Demokratische Republik = DDR) in the  late 1940s. In the year 1990 
Germany re-united. Then the Western part (and its whole population) was 
much wealthier than the Eastern part. Even the population of Western 
Berlin, which had 
been a capitalistic island in a socialistic ocean, was much wealthier 
than the residents in the  former socialist
Eastern Berlin. 
I agree with James Pethokoukis from the American Enterprise Institute who writes that 
"dynamic, prosperous economies that push the technological frontier are 
likely to have a relatively high level in income inequality" (aei).
 Maybe "dynamic, prosperous economies" need a high income inequality as 
an incentive. I think the chance to become outrageous rich could be a 
motivation to invest and to take high risks. Someone who sacrifices time
 and energy and takes high risks wants a reward. And some people like 
Julia Roberts & Steve Jobs have or had extremely rare talents which 
get rewarded.
Scott Winhsip from Manhattan Institute writes:" The prospect of vast economic returns might, for instance, incentivize 
more innovation and investment, producing stronger economic growth and 
higher incomes even among those who do not amass fortunes. By rewarding 
work and human capital investment, inequality between the upper middle 
class and the poor could also promote stronger earnings growth for 
everyone over time." (economics21).
                                                    
                                                 Rewards For Taking Risks 
The
 possibility to amass huge fortunes - which exists in the US but did not
 in the Sovjetunion - creates a climate for entrepreneurs like Bill 
Gates, 
Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk (Tesla), Larry Page (Google) and 
more. These people aren`t robber barons, often they provide useful 
services for the society. I doubt that companies like Microsoft, Google,
 Facebooks could have evolved in countries where high risks are not 
appropriately rewarded. By taking risks Musk, Page & Co. are driving
 innovation and econmic growth, creating wealth for everybody. The 
innovators generate new products, services and jobs. Even China`s 
communist government is aware of that and permits enterpreneurs like 
Alibaba founder Jack Ma to become a billionaire.
The
 media is also obsessed with the outreagous consumption of the one percent, their
 yachts, their mansons, their art collections and so on. But does 
anybody get hurt when a Wall Street moguls own mansions stuffed with 
Picassos and Warhols (billionaires)? Do we get poorer when a hedge fund manager buys a Rothko for $50,000 million? (wsj).
 The consume expenditures of the one percent usually don´t compete with the 
consume of the average people, they might eat more beluga caviar, but 
they don`t eat more bread, rice and noodles.
Often the 
rich donate their fortune to museums, universities and other public 
institutions. Collections like the Guggenheim, New York`s MoMa and 
other  museums in the US are usually financed by donations and often 
show art work which is loaned by some rich people.
It think the cult around Piketty and the bluster about income income equaity are based on envy. The 
aversion against the extreme wealth of Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, 
Warren Buffett and likes obstructs the fact that the average person in the West is much richer than people in  (youre-rich). There might be rising inequality worldwide but it is clear that life for everyone got better in the recent decades (spectator).
PS: For illustration I chose Daniela Rossel`s portrait: "Inge and her 
mother Ema in the living room" (from "Rica and famosas" series, 2000, 
Chromogenic print)  The artist is known for her portraits of the rich and
 famous in Mexico. The second image is from the same artist.


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