Canada’s Richest 1% Nearly As Wealthy As Poorest 80%
Canada’s Richest 1% Nearly As Wealthy As Poorest 80%
How are you blaming the “middle” class? What could you suggest nurses, teachers, fire fighters, etc do to solve the problem of wealth inequality?
I genuinely want to know because it seems to me that we control nothing and have no excess to give.
…so let people die, stop caring for our neighbours, allow ignorance and illiteracy to fester. Seems extreme and misplaced.
A better, less-nihilistic approach might be: stop buying things, cancel subscriptions, sell dividend-paying stocks, etc. Or even better: a general strike.
Yes, but it includes the whole population rather than a narrow sub-section. It would also send a much stronger message.
See what happens when CEOs and politicians need to wipe their own asses.
I suppose there isn’t much.
Dividends are free cash that the company distributes to shareholders whereas it ought to reward the workers imo. I see it as peak siphoning profit away from the working class to the “ruling” class (who don’t contribute anything).
Capital gains and the whole stock market are bad too. As is our tired, biased tax code.
Jesus… a lot to fix.
Incent is correct in fact 🤓
incent verb in·cent in-ˈsent incented; incenting; incents transitive verb
: incentivize … a large prize … may also incent some employee referrals. —Bill Conerly
Back in the 1840s apparently.
“The earliest known use of the verb incent is in the 1840s.”
???
Here’s the fed’s up-to-date numbers. So yeah, that’s a decent summary.
Doesn’t it show exactly what I said? Lemmy has a whole lot of top 10% people - I wouldn’t be shocked if it’s the majority. Nobody here is thinking of them when they say “ruling class”. The top 1% also contains a lot of kinda-rich people, who maybe own a couple of car dealerships, but could never afford a jet. If they do something in IT instead of cars, they again might be on Lemmy.
The total is about 170 trillion. For reference, Forbes billionaires, including the non-American ones, add up to 16.1 trillion.
(probably…maybe? that seems like something that might need more research to quantify, and probably has easily skewable results in either direction)
The income distribution would get you closer. The typical way to measure it would be amount earned minus amount saved, right?
Besides being fewer, richer people are able to save a bigger percentage of their earnings. That puts the middle class in kind of a consumption sweet spot - which is why the big businesses mostly target them.
If you want to measure less tangible things like carbon emissions or social opportunities it gets much more complicated, although I have no reason to think the overall story would change.
but us living in the ‘core’ are the 1% of the world
I should point out the international picture is nuanced in a similar way. There’s middle income countries, there’s very rich people in poor countries, and there’s countries like Dubai that kind of defy categorisation. The basic picture that the West is rich holds, but not that it’s all the wealth, and developing economies are quickly catching up because it’s just easier for them to grow. (Developed countries also account for a bit more than 10% of world population)
In the US, actually-doing-better-and-better middle class, for the most part. I’m seeing the top 10% as a usual “center” in analysis of the k-shaped economy. It’s brown people and Trump voters in trailer parks that are actually losing.
Looks like the trend is just a lot less pronounced in Canada, though. We’re all a bit poorer.
Trump voters in trailer parks that are actually losing.
It’s hard to be sad about that - their choices did this to themselves(and, annoyingly, also to the rest of us)
Finally, the top 1 per cent hold almost a quarter of all wealth in Canada. A person in the top 1 per cent owns 210 times more wealth than an average person in the bottom 50 per cent.
By contrast, the bottom 40 per cent collectively hold slightly more than 3 per cent of total wealth in Canada, each with an average net worth of just under $87,000.
Financial obesity is an existential threat to any society that tolerates it, and needs to cease being celebrated, rewarded, and positioned as an aspirational goal.
Corporations are the only ‘persons’ which should be subjected to capital punishment, but billionaires should be euthanised through taxation.
That’s a common idea. It does not explain well what’s been happening though. The Fed has definitey done things to exacerbate inequality and accelerate it but the system creates inequality without the need for Fed intervention. The post-Depression to 80s period was out of the ordinary for inequality and for prosperity of the working class. Look at some wealth share graphs that span into the 19th century or earlier and you’ll see that the system creates these effects even on gold standards with no Fed.
This is what the US looks like:
Here’s one going further back in some countries:
And here’s a more detailed picture in the US and Canada going to the 1920. Note that given the first one, i equality didn’t explode in the 7-year period between the creatiom of the Fed and 1920. It was far high way earlier:
I believe this fits the rest of the story much much more neatly:
And I think the alternative explanations proposed by various economists that don’t lean on labour power are a distraction that enables continued inequality growth, while we chase geese. Oh let’s push that lever, it’s going to help, a decade passes, inequality worse. Oh let’s push that other lever. A decade passes, inequality grows. Oh let’s push that other … Meanwhile the only solution that has ever worked in creating prosperity for the many is staring us in the face.
BTW I did not downvote but I suspect a lot of people here know these things and just don’t have the energy to explain their view so they just hit the button. I’ve been there. I also used to believe the monetarist explanation.
I don’t think interest rates created that wealth for two reasons.
One is because of contradictory trends - interest rates were higher (3-8%) duding the 1800-1930 period of rising inequality than during the late 80s-onwards period. Also interest rates were lower (0.5-4%) during the 1930-1965 period of decreasing inequality. Rates fell persistently under that level only after the dotcom bubble in 2001.
The other reason is is that given I can see brutal inequality happening during the 19th century without many of the modern financial instruments (and across diff countries), I have to conclude that there’s a more fundamental process that drives inequality. For me the best explanation so far is the process of capital accumulation which inherent to this economic system.
E: If you wanna see another consistent (inverse) correlation, look at how tax rates evolved during these periods.
19% would be the complacent middle class 🤮
Hot tip - that’s most Lemmy users. I’m guessing there’s also people in the top 0.9 kicking around.
Edit: Aaaand yup, there’s cope in the comments.
Socialists are mostly the champaign kind now, although that doesn’t make them wrong, neccesarily. Honestly, I have trouble picturing the old days when the kind of people I live around would have voted left.
Lot’s of wealthy posters. But they often hide it, because if they don’t they get called a liar or flooded with unimaginative threats.
And it’s too bad; we should encourage them to post. Know your enemy and all that.
What qualifies as “middle class” these days? Roughly 24% of Ontario public sector workers are on the sunshine list. While this doesn’t give us a ton of insight into the private sector, this would still suggest that if we say the 19% is the middle class that to be middle class you have to be making more than $100k/year…
Not trying to argue, just trying to understand where the goalposts are.
Oh, absolutely. I’m just trying to use it as a marker to try to figure out where the goal posts should be for what we are calling “middle class.”
I have a friend who works in central Ontario for a fortune 500 and they take home ~80k/year, and I’ve considered them and their family middle class for a while, but they also were telling me that they’re overextended and struggling to keep up on interest payments…while also being denied a consolidation loan. So maybe they are not really middle class…?
Ever moving, right? People in the top 0.9% all call themselves middle class, maybe “upper middle class” to shut down any contradictions. That’s because there’s a stigma to being a rich fatcat. For more complicated reasons, politicians like to sweep up most of the bottom 50% that owns basically nothing, as well. The only people who consistently get stuck into the lower class are basically people so powerless they might as well be a thing.
That being said, do be careful that income distribution is quite different from wealth distribution.
Lemmy tends rich and educated. So it would be my guess more than 50% are in the top 19%. Probably by both, since it seems to tend older than Reddit did. What you call that is another matter entirely; wealth and income levels all flow together smoothly in the raw data.
They enacted strict gun laws but expanded which law enforcement can carry firearms for this purpose.
They don’t care about any mass shooting victim. They claim to remember the 14 of polytechnique just to make it look like it is.
In reality gun laws in Canada were always about suppressing labor uprisings, sectarian uprisings (like the Irish in the 19th century, the Quebec bloc in the 1970s, and the Oka crisis in the 90s). Americans like to talk about taking up arms against the government but Canadians actually have.
But on a more realistic note I wish it was that easy to just get a mob of people to drag them out. But unlike times past when it was possible, they live so far apart from us and travel via helicopter and airplane as much as possible specifically to be as hard as possible to corner.