• RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    But is it really fair that a person with 50 million can turn that into 100 million, whereas most people can turn at most $5,000 into $10,000?

    Earning $5,000 over 7 years is basically worthless.

      • Crowfiend@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Using median makes it a loaded statistic skewed in favor of the minority (in this case, the wealthy).

        Over half the country is living paycheck-to-paycheck, so that median number is already in the ‘well-off’ category by default, making them irrelevant to the main point of discussion.

        • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You have it backwards. The mean, not the median, is skewed by outliers.

          If there are ten people in a room with $10 and one person with $1,000,000, the median is $10 whereas the mean is ~$90,000.

        • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You might not know what median means (math pun!).

          Averages or Means are skewed by outliers, not the median. The median is just picking the middle number in a list of numbers. There is no skewing possible. If you have 99 people making $1 per year and one person making $1B per year, the median is $1. The average/mean is $1,000,000.99 which is way skewed.

        • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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          7 months ago

          Got to eat. Retirement is gone, and your 401k is nothing more than a subsidy so you can work part time as a greeter until death.

        • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          At age 40, it’s recommended that you put 60-80% of retirement funds into the stock market. Doubling that is still significant.

    • SpacePirate@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      What does fairness have to do with it? Compound interest is just math.

      One could trivially make an argument that we should redistribute the wealth among the population, but there is not a clear way how to do this effectively, or it would have been done already.

      The hard part is taking on the appropriate amount of risk in order to actualize those gains; a bank won’t just give you a 10% interest rate, you have to work your ass of for it. An entrepreneur needs to assess the landscape and invest in what the market will want tomorrow, and most people guess suboptimally (3-6%), or end up losing money, whether in fact (negative returns) or relative to inflation (0-3%).

      Even pointing to the S&P 500, as most people do, you still need to make the conscious decision to sell and take profits, FOMO be damned. Or alternatively, taking a perceived loss but actual profit (e.g., you didn’t sell right at the peak, but that’s usually okay). It’s not easy, and most people don’t have the time or stomach for it; these people are best served by long term, government-backed bonds, after which you will come out only slightly ahead of inflation.

      Using the rule of 72, and a 3% bond rate, it would actually take you 24 years to double your money, not seven. And that, my friend, is why you and I are not billionaires.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        but there is not a clear way how to do this effectively, or it would have been done already.

        That is terrible reasoning. That would only be true if every idea ever come up with had been tried and no new ideas will come up.

        UBI would be quite effective for many reasons. The reason it hasn’t been done already has nothing to do with how effective it might be. And we know giving everyone money is effective, because Alaska does it with their oil dividends.

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Another method that has definitely not been fully implemented is debt jubilees for people with more debt than assets to cover that debt (e.g. student debt forgiveness, medical debt forgiveness, etc.).

        • SpacePirate@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          It’s not reasoning, or an argument for or against, it is just a statement. I’d admit that it’s probably a tautology.

          What the post described is a taxation and societal problem, not a problem with investing or compound interest in general.

          I’d easily agree that society is unfair, and that our taxation policies are directly antagonistic to the middle class, but again, this is simply math (and though it is theoretical, microeconomics).

    • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      But is it really fair that a person with 50 million can turn that into 100 million

      Yes.

      And since that can only happen by investing that amount into the economy, it’s wisely encouraged by the system, versus putting the 50 million in a vault somewhere.

      • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        7 months ago

        They are not investing it into the great magical economy. It’s in hedge funds that actively destroy the economy.

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          It’s essentially an investment in the country’s further financialization and privitization…both of which are things completely ruining the country (unless you’re rich, then these movements just make more parts of the country your own personal playground).

          And, it’s worth pointing out that the rich carry a large asset base in their own companies which they can borrow against tax free while the value of the underlying assets continually grow. The only thing similar a non-rich person has access to is a home equity line of credit…and even then you own a home with equity which…you ain’t rich but you ain’t exactly broke either.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        The fact that you can’t see how this is a huge flaw in, at the very least, the American form of capitalism is sad.

        • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You think it’s sad because you’re deeply ignorant. Do you also think that if the $5 baseball card you bought becomes worth $100, that that means you’ve stolen $95? lol

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            No, I don’t also think that.

            I do, however, think that I didn’t insult you, so that insult was absolutely not warranted.