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43 votes
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Elon Musk’s lawyers quietly subpoena public interest groups
38 votes -
Telegram messaging app CEO Pavel Durov arrested in France
69 votes -
French authorities arrest Telegram’s CEO
13 votes -
Inside the secret negotiations to free Evan Gershkovich
9 votes -
‘Morally, nobody’s against it’: Brazil’s radical plan to tax global super-rich to tackle climate crisis
61 votes -
International scheme to tax billionaires’ wealth technically feasible, study [by Gabriel Zucman] finds
30 votes -
Sweden has a global reputation for championing high taxes and social equality, but it has become a European hotspot for the super rich
19 votes -
European Court of Justice annulls sanctions against Russian billionaires
8 votes -
Truong My Lan: Vietnamese billionaire sentenced to death for $44bn fraud
33 votes -
Norway unveiled plans to remove a loophole used by the Nordic nation's richest – government attempts to drag more tax revenue out of the fleeing billionaires
15 votes -
‘We’ve lost the art of city building’: can the planner behind a tech-funded metropolis win over the skeptics?
25 votes -
The billionaire who wants to live forever has Long COVID
39 votes -
The farmers had what the billionaires wanted
23 votes -
Billionaire backers of new California city seek voter approval after stealthily snapping up farmland
27 votes -
Six Flags | Bankrupt
12 votes -
What to read if you miss ‘Succession’. Indulge in priceless reads about the scandals and lives of heirs, heiresses, and the people in their way.
7 votes -
Inside OpenAI, a rift between billionaires and altruistic researchers unravelled over the future of artificial intelligence
20 votes -
J. B. Pritzker: the billionaire US hotel heir—and progressive?
27 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump allegedly discussed US nuclear subs with Australian billionaire businessman Anthony Pratt after leaving White House: Sources
43 votes -
Clarence Thomas secretly participated in Koch Network donor events
34 votes -
Rupert Murdoch steps down as chairman of Fox Corporation and News Corp
44 votes -
Norway wealth tax pushes the rich to move to Switzerland – millionaire prime minister has embarked on a push to tax the wealthiest for social justice
41 votes -
Tech billionaires launch California ‘utopia’ website
55 votes -
How Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, Mark Zuckerberg, and Marc Andreessen—four billionaire techno-oligarchs—are creating an alternate, autocratic reality
31 votes -
The Silicon Valley elite who want to build a city from scratch
36 votes -
Far right wing French billionaire takes over prestigious newspaper Journal du Dimanche
17 votes -
Clarence Thomas’ thirty-eight vacations: The other billionaires who have treated the US Supreme Court Justice to luxury travel
54 votes -
Mapping the ownership network of Canada’s billionaire families
26 votes -
How the ultrawealthy use private foundations to bank millions in tax deductions while giving the public little in return
37 votes -
Billionaire Harlan Crow bought property from Clarence Thomas. The US Justice didn’t disclose the deal.
24 votes -
Taxing the superrich
11 votes -
Munger Hall: A billionaire's bizarre social experiment
4 votes -
Kurzgesagt: Billionaire propaganda, stories, and trusting science
9 votes -
Super-rich abandoning Norway at record rate as wealth tax rises slightly – flood moving abroad has come as a shock and is costing tens of millions in lost tax receipts
10 votes -
How Kurzgesagt cooks propaganda for billionaires
22 votes -
The rich have their own ethics: Effective altruism and the crypto crash
11 votes -
How Gautam Adani lost more than $50 billion in a week
4 votes -
Molly Nilsson wants a world with no billionaires – synthpop icon speaks about the future of creative pursuits in a neoliberal world
3 votes -
Are billionaires a market failure? And if not market, are they social failure?
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall): https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/ The opinion asserts...
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall):
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/
The opinion asserts that in response to liberalization of Chinese life, driven by capitalistic economic growth, is the reason that Xi Pinjing "cracked down in every sphere imaginable — attacking the private sector, humiliating billionaires, reviving Communist ideology, purging the party of corrupt officials and ramping up nationalism (mostly anti-Western) in both word and deed."
My conspiratorial brain latched on to the humiliating billionaires line, and started thinking about a between the lines message along the lines that billionaires are good and should not be humiliated, a subtle warning-response to the progressive grumblings here in the U.S. that a failure to support capitalism will result in totalitarianism.
Then I started thinking about the questions, are billionaires good for society? I had always held the position that a billionaire is a market failure (in my econ 101 understanding of the term), much like pollution. It is improper hoarding and unfair leveraging of capital into disproportionate and un-earned degree of pesonal privilege.
It is certainly a by-product of euro-american capitalism, whereby the desires and welfare of the many are trodden on by those with the ability to fight and to shape the regulatory machine meant to protect the interests of the common-wealth.
I see a few possibilities. One, is that my understanding of economics is wrong, and producing as many billionaires as possible is the ultimate goal of capitalism and in fact good for everyone, even in theory.
Two, it is indeed as I suspect, a market failure. And the failure here is one of degree, it is not, in fact problematic to have some individuals with significantly greater wealth among us, and is, in fact, beneficial overall, but to have some with so much more than the rest of us (wealth inequaility) is a result of getting in the way of a clean functioning marketplace.
Three, economic theory is working as described, and economic theory/activity is an insufficient foundation for the maintenance and success of a whole society, and we need to find a way to constrain it to its own sphere, so that it provides us with what we need to be healthy and happy, but no more.
I turn to the bright minds of tildes: am I looking at this right?
16 votes -
The super-rich ‘preppers’ planning to save themselves from the apocalypse
17 votes -
Patagonia founder gives away the company to fight climate change
26 votes -
Erik Prince wants to sell you a “secure” smartphone that’s too good to be true
12 votes -
Greenland is ground zero for the impacts of climate change, but it could also become ground zero for sourcing the metals needed to power the solution to the crisis
4 votes -
Elon Musk offers to buy Twitter outright for $41 billion
21 votes -
MacKenzie Scott donates $436 million to Habitat for Humanity
11 votes -
MacKenzie Scott donates a record $275 million to Planned Parenthood
9 votes -
The Billionaire’s Bard: On the rationalist fictions of Neal Stephenson
9 votes -
Utah billionaire leaves Mormon church, donates $600,000 to LGBTQ group
13 votes -
Why New York’s Billionaires’ Row is half empty
8 votes