A Critique of Obscene
WealthBy
Richard Wolff
December 20, 202:
Information Clearing House
-- "
Economy for All"
-Wherever and whenever obscenely
rich people existed, they always protected
their wealth and the privileges that come
with it from the majority of non-wealthy
people working for them and around them.
Emperors, kings, czars as well as masters of
huge slave plantations, lords of big feudal
manors, and major shareholders and top
executives of capitalist megacorporations
did so partly by the use of brute force, or
through the exercise of power, and bribery.
All of them also used ideological
persuasion, but none more so than
capitalists today. And while “the weapon of
criticism can never replace the criticism of
weapons,” according to Karl Marx, a critique
of capitalism’s obscene wealth today and its
ideological justifications is arguably much
needed.
One attempted justification argues that
obscene wealth is society’s reward for those
people making crucial contributions to
social welfare and progress. Billionaire
Elon Musk, for example, contributed the
electric car, some would argue; billionaire
Jeff Bezos offered the speedy ordering and
delivery of goods. But Musk’s electric car
was a late step in a long evolution of
electricity, batteries, and automobiles.
Constituting that evolution were many
contributions by many people along the way.
Musk’s contribution was impossible
without—and thus dependent on—all those
prior contributions. Rewarding contributions
and contributors justly would entail
rewarding them all, not exclusively Musk.
Doing the latter is manifestly unjust and
unjustifiable.
The relevant parallel here is a village
battling to escape flooding from a nearby
river’s impending overflow. A subset of
villagers gather to dig sand, acquire
sandbags, fill them with sand, and then pass
them forward, from person to person, so that
the last person standing closest to the
river, named Elon, can pile bags on the
river’s bank. A grateful village collects
$10,000 to reward those responsible for the
happy outcome: no flood. The check for
$10,000 is handed to Elon. Rewarding in this
way—rather than sharing the reward among all
those who collaborated to produce the
outcome—is more of an incentive to position
a single person in a particular place rather
than to work alongside all the fellow
villagers who contributed to the outcome.
Indeed, rewarding in that way will likely
strike others as a disincentive to
contribute from other positions. If they do
not fill those other positions (thereby
losing a chance for reward), Elon would lose
his reward too. If contributors to the
anti-flood effort compete for Elon’s
position, disrupting or delaying the effort,
such competition itself risks enabling the
flood and thereby depriving everyone of any
reward. The village would do better to
distribute the collected $10,000 to reward
all villagers who collaborated in preventing
the flood.
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Besides being unjust and risky, obscene
wealth as an incentive is completely
unnecessary.
In many fields of endeavor across human
activity, inventors and innovators regularly
appreciate and welcome rewards that are not
obscene wealth, yet are more than
sufficient. Musicians, artists, farmers,
factory workers, teachers, and many others
have contributed innovative solutions to
society’s problems large and small. These
people were often driven by social
accolades, applause and approval, and
rewards and prizes of modest size. For
example, John Maynard Keynes, an economist,
developed (1) a critique of private
capitalism’s instability and (2) monetary
and fiscal policies to counter that
instability that have been widely deployed
since the 1930s. His work’s contribution to
society was immense, yet his financial
rewards were very modest in comparison to
the billions gathered by entrepreneurs like
Musk and Bezos. The Nobel Prize (which
awards around $1 million to each of its
winners) is as great a reward as most
economists can imagine. Likewise, Ludwig van
Beethoven and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Louis
Pasteur and Albert Einstein, and countless
other major contributors to modern life were
not especially driven by any prospect of
obscene wealth, nor did they obtain it
during their lifetimes.
Not only are huge rewards unnecessary for
invention, innovation, and progress, but
inventions have also mostly been tangential
to the accumulation of obscene wealth. It is
capitalism that enables such wealth now (as
did feudalism and slavery in the past).
Often the inventor is ignored, swindled, or
otherwise left far behind by a different
person who is driven by and seeks to gather
obscene wealth. That person mobilizes a
capitalist enterprise to monopolize the
production or use of what was newly invented
for other reasons. Good connections, family
wealth, political influence, bribery,
corruption, and countless other factors
combine to enable persons other than
inventors to “capitalize” on someone else’s
invention. In capitalism, monopolizing on an
invention offers far better chances to amass
obscene wealth than inventing something ever
did or does.
Amalgamating diverse small shops into one
big store with “departments” (plus
mail-order catalogs) to include an
ever-wider number of commodities enabled
economies of scale. This model in turn
enabled American chains of department stores
like Sears to profitably lower prices and
accumulate obscene wealth. The Walton family
took economies of scale further by importing
China’s low-wage outputs to run an even
bigger chain of department stores (Walmart).
Bezos took that model yet another step
further via Amazon becoming a “department
store” for nearly everything and delivering
products to customers almost anywhere
quickly via the internet. Billions were thus
amassed via a sequence of small steps. None
of these ideas or concepts were great new
inventions. All were market monopolies
operated long enough to amass billions
before the next step transferred that
opportunity to others.
Amassing obscene wealth also clashes with
democracy. There is a reason why calls for
equality so often accompany calls for
democracy. Members of communities that
tolerate vast inequalities of wealth and
income quickly discover that the rich use
their wealth to block, manipulate, or
destroy any democracy that arises. For
example, they have always understood that
universal or even widespread suffrage risks
a non-wealthy majority voting to undo
society’s wealth inequality. So the rich
block democracy, prevent varying forms of
democracy from acquiring any real content,
or, when pressed, subvert even those forms.
Fresh from huge increases in U.S. wealth
inequality, the rich nonetheless abet the
Republican Party’s anti-democratic electoral
claims and maneuvers, tolerate the party’s
restrictions on mass voting, and fight
particularly hard even against the modestly
progressive tax dimensions of President Joe
Biden’s Build Back Better proposals.
Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and other U.S.
billionaires decide alone and unaccountably
how to spend hundreds of billions. The
decisions of a few hundred bring economic
development to some regions, industries, and
enterprises and lead to the economic decline
of other regions. The many millions of
people affected by those spending decisions
are excluded from participating in making
them. Those millions of people lack the
economic and social power wielded by
unaccountable, obscenely wealthy tiny
minorities. That is the opposite of
democracy.
The obscenely rich have also used the
power they yield from their wealth to
successfully undo taxes threatening their
obscene wealth or its dynastic transmission
through inheritance. One of many possible
examples is the federal estate tax in the
United States. From 1942 to 1976, estates
over $60,000 were subject to an estate tax
rate of 77 percent. Nowadays, estates of up
to $23.4 million for married couples are
exempt from estate tax while estates above
that are taxed at a 40 percent rate. The
obscenely rich have thus driven the U.S.
economy and society further from anything
remotely resembling a “level playing field.”
Today, children of the obscenely rich have
myriad advantages compared to all other
children. These advantages were secured by
how their rich parents changed the nation’s
estate tax system. Their children will
likely use their inherited wealth to
perpetuate the system.
The obscenely rich via real estate
holdings—such as Donald Trump—exhibit
another remarkable anti-democratic quality.
Their wealth is derived from a demography:
where growing populations choose to live and
work. If those populations choose to live
and work somewhere else, then the real
estate owners in that location can become
obscenely rich. They did nothing to the land
they own to become wealthy. Other people’s
location decisions did that in the context
of U.S. capitalism’s institutionalization of
private property and markets. The resulting
obscene wealth inequality is unwanted by big
majorities, according to recent U.S. polls.
That contradiction—between what capitalism
delivers and what most people want—pervades
U.S. capitalism more these days than ever.
Finally, obscene wealth flaunts its
disregard for the law. From the Panama to
the Pandora Papers, among other sources, we
know that the obscenely wealthy are also
active in tax havens hiding their wealth
from tax authorities, law courts, public
opinion, and spouses. Their wealth not only
buys the laws and regulations enabling legal
tax evasion; it also buys global tolerance
of tax havens (increasingly located inside
the United States in states such as South
Dakota, Nevada, and Delaware). Thus, nearly
everywhere in the capitalist world, the
non-wealthy pay more in taxes and suffer
public service deficits caused by the tax
evasions of the obscenely wealthy.
Unjust, unnecessary, and undemocratic,
extreme wealth must and does strive to
secure global capitalism’s support and
sustenance. The considerable success of
these means to secure wealth has now led to
the increasing criticism of capitalism. The
existing system produces an economic
inequality so extreme that it reacts back to
jeopardize both obscene wealth and the
system itself. At that, Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel and Marx would smile.