Comment on But how would they be able to live on that?
DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world 6 months agoIf you think that, you obviously don’t know what the stock market was created to do. Just google it. No point for me to write it here.
Comment on But how would they be able to live on that?
DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world 6 months agoIf you think that, you obviously don’t know what the stock market was created to do. Just google it. No point for me to write it here.
Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Original intention isn’t relevant when the current purpose is to fuck over anybody who isn’t the rich.
DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world 6 months ago
First of all, it matters if the stock market is fulfilling its original intention. Which it obviously is. Second of all, some of the biggest traders on the stock market are pension funds of common workers, appreciating their retirement money. Fuck over how exactly?
Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world 6 months ago
“The rich now own a record share of stocks,” Axios reported on January 10, noting that the top 10 percent hold about 93 percent of U.S. households stock market wealth.
ips-dc.org/the-richest-1-percent-own-a-greater-sh…
You’re being misleading, or have been misleading about the allocation of wealth within the stock market.
Retirement should be a public service, not a form of gambling within a system set up for the rich.
DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Ok, lets do some math. The GDP of the US is $28 trillion. The population of 15 years and above is about 273.85 million. That gives about $102,000 annually per person in this category. The median personal income is about $40,500 annually. So almost 40% of the entire economy goes to wages and other income of normal people alone. And yes, it is median (not average) so we are talking normal people wages, not CEO wages. According to wikipedia, about 17.3% of the GDP is government consumption and 17.2% is capital investment. That leaves little over 25% unaccounted for. This will include everything not accounted above. Charities, rich people wages, lottery winnings, … and of course, stock market gains and dividends.
I can’t account for more of the 25% right now, but even if it all went to the filthily rich along with a proportional part of government consumption and capital investment, then the normal people still get 61% of the economy. In the absolute worst case. Seems to me like lot of the “ultra-wealthy own most of america” is just misinformation.