The new super-rich
Technology is advancing in leaps and bounds -- and so is economic inequality, says writer Chrystia Freeland. In an impassioned talk, she charts the rise of a new class of plutocrats (those who are extremely powerful because they are extremely wealthy), and suggests that globalization and new technology are actually fueling, rather than closing, the global income gap. Freeland lays out three problems with plutocracy … and one glimmer of hope.
In Plutocrats, Chrystia Freeland explores the growing gap between the working poor and the increasingly disconnected mega-rich.
In the
1970s, the One Percent accounted for about 10 percent of the national income in
the United States. Today, their share has more than doubled to above 20
percent. But what's even more striking is what's happening at the very tippy
top of the income distribution. The 0.1 percent in the U.S. today account for
more than eight percent of the national income. They are where the One Percent
was 30 years ago. Let me give you another number to put that in perspective,
and this is a figure that was calculated in 2005 by Robert Reich, the Secretary
of Labor in the Clinton administration. Reich took the wealth of two admittedly
very rich men, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, and he found that it was
equivalent to the wealth of the bottom 40 percent of the U.S. population, 120
million people.