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Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

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  • Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0721172334.htm

    Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth, Study Shows; New Model Isolates the Effects of Chance in an Investment-Based Economy

    ScienceDaily (July 21, 2011) — Most of our society's wealth is invested in businesses or other ventures that may or may not pan out. Thus, chance plays a role in where the wealth of a society will end up.

    But does chance favor the concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, or does it tend to level the playing field? Three University of Minnesota researchers have built a simplified model that isolates the effects of chance and found that it consistently pushes wealth into the hands of a few, ever-richer people.

    The study, "Entrepreneurs, chance, and the deterministic concentration of wealth," is published in the July 20 issue of the journal PLoS ONE.

    The researchers simulated the performance of a large number of investors who started out with equal amounts of capital and who realized returns annually over a number of years. But wealth did not remain equal, because each year an entrepreneur's return was a random draw taken from a pool of possible return rates. Thus, a high return did not guarantee continuing high returns, nor did early low returns mean continuing bad luck.

    Even though all investors had an equal chance of success, the simulations consistently resulted in dramatic concentration of wealth over time. The reason: With compounding capital returns, some individuals will have a string of high returns and, given enough time, will accumulate an overwhelming share of the wealth.

    This appears to be a fundamental feature of economies where wealth is primarily generated from returns on investment (for example, through business ownership and growth), the researchers said.

    "Predictions from this model about how wealth is distributed were more accurate than predictions from classic economic models," said first author Joseph Fargione, an adjunct professor of ecology, evolution and behavior in the university's College of Biological Sciences.

    The model predicts that the rate at which wealth concentrates depends on the variation among individual return rates. For example, when variation is high, it would take only 100 years for the top 1 percent to increase their share of total wealth from 40 percent -- a recent level in the United States -- to 90 percent.

    Healthy economies support diverse entrepreneurial efforts, leading to high economic growth. But concentration of wealth reduces diversity, and with it the most likely growth rate for a country's economy, according to the researchers.

    "The implication is that nations with diverse economies should tend to outcompete on the world stage those with large concentrations of wealth, such as monarchies, or established democracies that have allowed their wealth to concentrate," said author Clarence Lehman, associate dean for research in the College of Biological Sciences.

    But while the rate of wealth concentration was increased by high variation among individual investors' returns, it bore no relation to the average economic growth.

    "This leads to the surprising finding that wealth will concentrate due to chance alone in growing, stagnant or shrinking economies," said author Steve Polasky, professor of applied economics in the College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences.

    The simulation results showed wealth concentrating regardless of economic cycles of growth and recession and regardless of whether wealth is split between two offspring every generation. As wealth concentrates with a few individuals, the growth of the economy will depend more and more on the returns of those few, making the economy less resilient to disruptions in their investments, the researchers said.

    "The irony is that the economic diversity that helps ensure the presence of some successful enterprises and spurs economic growth could be lost if the success of these enterprises undermines economic diversity," said Fargione. "To retain the benefits of a diverse capitalist economy, we need economic policies that counter what seems to be the innate tendency for economies to concentrate wealth and become less diverse."

    The simulations showed that a tax (or other mandatory donation to the public good) on the largest inherited fortunes would short-circuit the over-concentration of wealth. But the researchers stress that their point is to advocate not a particular policy, but a policy that accomplishes the goal of protecting long-term economic stability.
    This is interesting, no?

  • #2
    Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

    The historical record is monopolies (technically oligopolies) have been the salient feature of the world's economy for a hundred years. Further concentration - corporate, not individuals, another academic waste of time in the essay - on an international scale have made possible the global arbitrage of labor. The financialization of the global economy is its newest phase. Luck? Yea, I guess that's it

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    • #3
      Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

      I think the point is that there is a natural tendency towards wealth accumulating in the hands of the few, above and beyond any of our social constructs. We must fight nature.

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      • #4
        Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

        I wonder what the model would show if it were adapted to account for the political favors the wealthy sometimes avail themselves.

        Many people use these results as justification for an inheritance tax.

        The inheritance tax has some serious flaws, though. For starters corporations never die. And there always seems to be loopholes for trust funds.

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        • #5
          Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

          i recently read "winner take all politics," which documents businesses' and the wealthy's use of their funds in lobbying, think tanks, etc starting in the carter administration to hinder regulation and promote e.g. tax policies which favor them. the influence of money on politics, which in turns structures economic interaction, is not random.

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          • #6
            Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

            Originally posted by jk View Post
            i recently read "winner take all politics," which documents businesses' and the wealthy's use of their funds in lobbying, think tanks, etc starting in the carter administration to hinder regulation and promote e.g. tax policies which favor them. the influence of money on politics, which in turns structures economic interaction, is not random.
            Citing "human nature" is a tried and true dodge of those holding most of the cards. Power-friendly 'studies' like these keep academics employed.

            The inverse is equally true. Get a little too frank, bye bye

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            • #7
              Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

              It's garbage, IMO. See for yourself. The original paper can be found here.

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              • #8
                Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

                Originally posted by aaron View Post
                I think the point is that there is a natural tendency towards wealth accumulating in the hands of the few, above and beyond any of our social constructs. We must fight nature.

                No.

                The capitalist system of investment is not "nature". It is a man-made construct, arrived at over centuries, designed a priori to concentrate wealth. This "study" just illustrates that. There is no natural law here at all.

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                • #9
                  Re: Chance Favors the Concentration of Wealth

                  Wait a minute....the rich get richer? This is GROUNDBREAKING.

                  Seriously though, I'm not sure this model is realistic enough to be useful. Am I correct in thinking that:

                  1. It assumes all money comes from investing and not from working a regular job.
                  2. It assumes that investment decisions are pure chance.
                  3. It assumes that people don't spend any money, they simply accumulate.

                  Changing these assumptions to more closely mimic real life might actually concentrate wealth faster.

                  Don't these results seem intuitive anyway?

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