A friend commented on my critique of the Oxfam paper and said that it is not only Oxfam that questions rising inequality, there are also some reference to the Credit Suisse report, the last Davos
conference saying that inequality as "deepening", and Piketty says the
same thing.
My main issue here is against bad math. The numerator, world's top billionaires (numbers from Forbes) is
cumulative wealth of the top 80, or top 100, etc. rich individuals, accumulated
after 4, 5, 7 decades. But denominator is wealth of a country for 1 year. Numerator
will be bloated while denominator is relatively understated, that is why people
get quotients like 40% or 60% of GDP, etc.
To compare apples to apples, it should be:
[wealth of top 10 (or top 80, or top 100, etc.) accumulated over 40 years] / [national wealth (or GDP size) accumulated over 40 years].
What Oxfam and others lousily did is:
[wealth of top 10 (or top 80, or top 100, etc.) accumulated over X years] / [national wealth (or GDP size) of only 1 year]
That is why the numerator is bloated, the denominator is controlled. Lousy math.
Here's an analogy. People take the cumulative wealth of
the CEO of a company with 200 employees, the value of his houses, cars,
investments, other properties, things that he acquired over the past 40 years
as an ordinary employee, then a junior officer until he became a CEO of that same
company. That's the numerator, it's big because it's accumulated wealth over 40
years.
Then people get that company's gross sales for one year. This method of bloated numerator over denominator = "scandalous
inequality" is simply lousy math.
The gross debt/GDP ratio can be comparable because a
responsible government would aspire to pay back or retire some debts in period of no economic
and financial turmoil or crisis, so the ratio should flatline or even decline
after sometime. But most or majority of governments are outright irresponsible,
spend-spend-spend, borrow-tax-borrow is their endless motto, thus the ratio
keeps rising.
See photo 1 below. Many people say having those tall and flashy skyscrapers in Makati is scandalous or even criminal because there are so many squatters left behind. Are they correct in saying this?
No. Why?
1. In the first place, there should be no squatters in this part of the river, Pasig river. That area should have no structures because that is a river bank, prone to flooding and the people living on those structures contribute to more solid wastes directly dumped to the river.
2. Assuming that all laws (on private property, public property, environmental protection, etc.) are waived and the squatters are justified to live in that river bank. Those structures will greatly improve as the residents there have property rights to the area, there is no threat of being demolished, so they will aspire to build more stable structures.
In a country
of 102 M people, only a few dozen of Lambo and Ferrari? There should be
hundreds. There should be more rich and super rich people here.
A position in government is often a trap. Rational people
become irrational, easily infected by a welfarist, populist, and even socialist thinking. Inequality is
wrong so there should be forced equality. Pull down the rich and efficient and
subsidize the lazy or irresponsible. Like people who do not want to work, or they work 6 days a week but
also drink and party 6 nights a week and have zero savings.
"Trickle down" philosophy is actually from a
statist or "worship the state" philosophy.
The biggest entity in society is the state and its national and local agencies and bureaucracies. From
the state, subsidies and welfare and the moon and the stars will trickle down
to the masses.
A friend commented that "To improve I believe we all need to be Smart. Being able
to get by with just a "job" is not enough. People don't realize that
in a few years computers will replace us. I struggle to figure out which job a
computer won't do better in the future."
Right, and many jobs that are done by less skilled workers --
laundry, street sweeping, kitchen dish washing, rice planting and harvesting, cashiers in MRT
stations, etc. -- will be done by machines. And many anti-rich,
anti-capitalism, anti-globalization, anti-many things will cry out loud in the
streets to further raise the government-dictated minimum wage. And this will result in an unintended consequent of more unskilled people who will no longer be hired because the mandatory wages + mandatory social
contributions have become higher while those skills are replaceable by
machines.
---------------See also:
Inequality 25: On High CEOs Pay and Legislated Minimum Wages, April 30, 2015
Inequality 26, Pew survey result on support for free market, July 27, 2015
Inequality 27, ADR Institute forum on poverty and growth, August 18, 2015
Inequality 28, IBON and sensational analysis, November 19, 2015
BWorld 42, World inequality, Oxfam and bad mathematics, February 11, 2016
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