I find the term "soft corruption" is more appropriate since hard corruption involves breaking actual laws. So, for example under so-called "corporate personhood" what we understand to be corruptuon is perfectly legal. Also, with the Janus scotus decision in 2018 that stripped public worker unions of political speech, the idea that "corporate personhood" is about free speech falls flat.
There should be restitution, something towards making it right for those harmed by their actions. Or just taking care of the workers versus the shareholders in the first place. Funny how money corrupts. Everything is for sale including Extreme Court Justices!
@@kevinmetcalfe7126 ABSOLUTELY! At most, people generally get a few dollars for years worth of lawsuits (even if what the company did was illegal). The cost to do the wrong should should be SO EXPENSIVE that it's not worth it. And I also agree about jail time. OR if corporations are PEOPLE (yeah, we need to fix Citizens United) then CORPORATIONS should be in jail for bad stuff done on their behalf. If not literally, then they should LOSE a LOT of rights and privileges. Those who know businesses and economy better than I do (it's sooo convoluted now) would know the best way to do so with minimal pain to most of the workers and hold those who made the bad decisions (or who mandated it) pay.
@@Nemesisnxt It's clear they meant 1,000 people with $1,000,000 considering that one billion dollars is 1,000 times greater than one million dollars. Have whatever opinion you want but intentionally obtuse bad faith arguments don't help anyone.
The existence of a loophole means there are no taxes which are "theirs" to pay. What does it mean to pay your taxes? It means paying what the law requires. If there's a loophole in the law that reduces your tax bill, then "paying your taxes" just means paying the lesser amount.
Very true @andrewj22 - however, the laws could always be changed to reduce the number of loopholes. But since it's often the rich that influence these laws, they keep the loopholes in place for their own benefit. Not that I believe that all rich people are only out for themselves. There's at least some that actually care about humanity and their fellow human beings... not sure if it's a very high percentage though.
@@rodsmediaroom835 The greater a person's lifestyle is beyond what's necessary, the less it makes sense to say they care about others. In other words, the rich are inherently sociopaths. Only a sociopath would hoard that much money when it could be used to do so much good for others.
While i make $10.50/hr as a cashier, $900/semester as an intern, can't afford community college, and use welfare, and 43% of the population lives in poverty, then no, I'll never support the existence of a single billionaire.
Fill out the Federal Application for Student Aide. If you are as poor as you say you are, you will qualify for the PEL grant. $7400. That will pay all books, tuition, fees at any community college with money left over. Then live off your 10.50 and hour and intern money. Keep doing what you know is right and good things will happen. They always do.
@@douglastovey2685 I lost Pell grants because of bad grades. When I first went to college, I had to rely on Medicaid because higher education doesn't offer healthcare. But because welfare isn't an unconditional cash transfer, I couldn't use my health coverage to take care of my sick mom. She was sick for six years and ultimately passed away. The stress from this caused my grades to drop, lose financial aid, and not get it back despite the financial aid office knowing what happened to my mom.
You are aware that the middle class draw more ss and Medicare than they pay in taxes or that the poor get free healthcare free food free money and subsidized houseing the rich on the other hand get no benefit from any of these things but pay over seventy percent of the federal taxes stop believing in Democrat lies
Democrats party of handouts that live off our children they are the ones who will inherit a bankrupt shell of a nation because you won't pay enough taxes for the handouts Democrats want why is that vote out handout Democrats before it's to late our children's future depend on it
@@scifirealism5943 The only time I’ve found myself doing a job that I wasn’t allowed to quit, was when I wore a shirt with patches saying “US Army” on my chest.
Jim, Rob, and Alice Walton are each worth more than $60 billion. Here in Western Pennsylvania I have seen with my own eyes estates inherited by heirs of fortunes made in steel, coal, oil, gas, timber, and beer. These people have their own private clubs and frolic at upscale resorts. Never have to work a day in their life. Don’t have to make mortgage and car payments. Much of the wealth hoarded by the elite, regardless of its source, could be very useful to the non-elite who want to go to college or start a business or buy a house at an affordable price or get their teeth fixed or pay for a much-needed operation. Serious reforms need to be made. There really needs to be a cap on how much wealth an individual can have.
I'm a poor, self supporting college student using welfare to get by. If I had a full ride scholarship or grant, I wouldn't need welfare and could compete with rich students.
Their is no pie. Except mother nature. That is the pie. A wealthy person can be greedy or not. A poor person can be greedy or not. Just because a person is wealthy doesn't make them greedy and just because a person is poor doesn't make them not greedy. Money is a tool we freely use to trade for this and that. Great invention really. My experience with bartering always usually leaves a little bit of a bitter taste in my mouth as if I have been taken advantage of. With money I can easily decide what works for me in terms of the value for my work. Sooo easy. And as a side note and a good practice to put things in perspective, the next time you think something is expensive try and make it yourself from scratch. I mean mining the material, processing that material, engineer and design it, throw away your mistakes, remake it 10 more times until you get something you can use and make all the tools you need to build the thing. You get my point. It's a matter of perspective. Things are actually too cheap that we have become a culture of greed and entitlement. But somehow we are not fulfilled as a whole.
A bunch of whiners like I've never seen. Go out and make your own money and stop counting other people's money and waxing on about how much of that you should have. Just pathetic. Create something!
If it is true, that many billionaires are psychopaths, nothing said will effect them. It would take hard work, commitment and persistence. They won’t go down to poor multimillionaires easily.
That much is true. But add one stark truth: CONservatism in both parties is our problem. CONservatism= No taxes on the rich, but definitely tax & screw the regular folk in our country! THAT'S WHAT "TRICKLE-DOWN IS!"
Everybody should pay one flat tax of 10%, regardless of income. "Thou shalt not covet" (10th Commandment). We must cut Federal spending 70%. "Thou shalt not steal" (8th Commandment).
@@davidlafleche1142 generally it should be poorer people pay a lower % of there own income, richer a higher %, as poorer individuals really cannot afford even smaller taxes while the ultra rich can easily sneeze away a much larger percent and still be fine.
@@Michelle-hh5de TBF, since then, they've been untouchable for 120yrs now... they regularly slip passed every possible consequence for every possible evil they commit... they have private security, bunkers, private jets to escape with; far as they're concerned, they are and will be untouchable, and they will believe that right up until they're disabused, which is unclear if it will happen anytime soon, even if it IS inevitable...
Far more likely to eat each other these days--with basically half our political lines happily shining the shoes of the rich with their tongues in hopes of someday being rich (they won't be).
@@tHebUm18 that some MAGAts and GOPers will fight to defend the matrix is, to quote Metallica, "Sad, But True" "The biggest con in this country is people making millions of dollars a year convincing people making $50,000 a year that people making $10,000 a year are the problem" - Brian Tyler Cohen
You are aware that the rich pay almost all the federal taxes reich lies to you by withholding information from you Democrats party of handouts that live off our children they are the ones who will inherit a bankrupt shell of a nation because you won't pay enough taxes for the handouts they want
How it s a myth? I can cite athletes, entertainers, as well as business man who have achieved this. You are a naive and silly fool to disparge the efforts others have made just to make you feel less small...
Or a really popular artist. J. K Rowling (for a short time, anyway) comes to mind, and so does Sir Paul McCartney. If he's not a billionaire he's really close and could be tomorrow if so desired. Two in 8 billion... I'm not that good with a keyboard or a bass.
@danielwilliams8346 Who cares....I dont care about the success of someone else if they did it legally. That is why when people attack Bezos I laugh or Gates or Jobs...these guys pioneered whole industries and they DESERVE the money they earned. They are a goal for others to reach. But its not just them, athletes can make Billions, so can entertainers, like Swift. Are you telling me, THEY dont earn their money? Course not. So people need to stop with the jealousy and desire to steal...
Translation: "I am envious of people who are successful, and so I project malicious motives onto them, so that I can feel justified in hating what I cannot achieve myself."
Billionaires shouldn't exist. Any property above 1 billion should be taxed at an EXTREMELY high rate. Watch them pay their workers more fairly if that happens.
'property' is one thing. You can't liquidate $100,000 worth of a factory and make a down payment on a car. But that much in stocks and other volatile financials? Perhaps these should only be available after a tax man signs off on the transaction, buy, sell, or trade. Close loopholes, no shells, shadows, wights, ghost, or wisp corporate entities... and a fair tax.
@@Psuedo-Nim Read the part of all. They can have some. But not all of it. They have way to much in comparison to rest of us. You are on the billionaire side of things.
Familial wealth has created a neo aristocracy. A super upper class of people that seem to grow wealthier every year. And they use their financial power in many ways. This is completely counter to our belief in a meritocracy and the benefits it bestows upon our society.
Nobody has a problem with billionaires, just people that skirt the system. If you skirt taxes with off shore accounts, you're not supporting your country.
Well said!! But, BUT way too many ppl, especially in our capitalistic society are swept away, idolize whoever the person is driving that exotic car, wearing designer clothes, sporting big chunky gold jewelry and truly believe they must be god sent to earth. Tell me I have this wrong. I dare you.
Definitely an admirable concept yet, unfortunately not very realistic given that our entire system and society is based upon Capitalism, capital and money being so pervasive and cancerous. Money for today by literally any means necessary and literally everything else be damned.
They do pay taxes, and I want people to stop using idiotic terms like fair share, and ACTUALLY define what they mean...WHAT do you consider fair. Dont use a slogan, use a number or percetange. THEN meaningful discussion can happen.
@@shadowmancer99 Did you not watch the State of the Union speech where Joe Biden gave the percentage income tax that billionaires pay compared to the average American. I don't recall the exact percentage for billionaires, but it was ridiculously low.
that's what the Trudeau government in Canada is trying to do now, make the very wealthy at the top contribute their fair share to the common public good. but sadly, as expected, the greedy rich are vehemently opposed and have unleashed their media attack dogs and far-right wingnuts, accusing our government of being 'fascist' 'communist' 'dictator' blahblahblah 🙄 as if asking the super rich to pay a teensy bit more in taxes, instead of hiding & hoarding vast fortunes and not contributing is somehow is akin to communism 🤷🏻♂ considering they are millionaires & billionaires who can easily afford to pay up, and still be obscenely rich.
Add to all this that Billionaires just sit on most of their cash... and when money stagnates, the economy suffers. A healthy economy requires the movement of money.
I'm in favour of equality, but I'm not sure this particular argument makes sense. I doubt most billionaires are keeping piles of cash under their mattresses.
"A healthy economy requires the movement of money" -- I agree; there must be a healthy circulation of it. That reminds me of the line from Thornton Wilder's play, The Matchmaker: "Money is like manure; it's not worth a thing unless it's spread around encouraging young things to grow."
Billionaires move huge amounts of money around whether it be in stocks or property or funding projects. And creating companies If they didn’t they wouldn’t have become billionaires.
Jessie Ventura said it well: “There should be no billionaires, because it’s impossible to actually work for that much money. If you can’t live on a million dollars a month, there’s something wrong with you.”
It should be "how many politicians are too much"...they add ZERO value to society. Only way to become a "billionaire" is to provide value to enormous amounts of people....Amazon, Oprah Winfrey, JK Rowling, Microsoft are perfect examples.
Sure. As long as they are held to the same standards as mom and pop up the street. Pay the same 13% fed and 8% state taxes. If they go to prison when they break laws. And there are anti-corruption laws that are enforced.
Unless income is taxed in a graduated manner, as percentage, increased as income increases, the wealthy become increasingly free to spend amounts far beyond, exorbitant compared to ANY OTHER INDIVIDUAL. This is Not in the interest of a community, as the wealthiest wields autocratic power.
Great analysis. The huge amount of money billionaires have came from somebody. Think about all the regular people working hard with low wages to produce things.
@@meeraj-4774 Right. Like 25% interest on credit cards. It is true that a lot of people got a big advantage with good education and family wealth. And once at a high level there are plenty of ways for the rich to get richer. Regular people know very little about the complex financial system possibilities and scams. They are not in that world. I would be somewhat satisfied if public education was properly funded and there was a medicare for all type system so everybody could at least get medical treatments when needed. Me. I am not complaining for myself. I am doing OK. I have no credit card debt but a lot of guitars. Maybe $1 billion is enough for one person.
and? Does that mean that his message is wrong? Or is 4 millio comparable to 20 billion? And your point explain that he is no socialist, if he was he wouldn't have 4 millions.
@@malogibeaux4946 4 million isn't a lot. It's peanuts, especially at his age AND in California. 1 billion is 1 thousand million -- hardly comparable to 4 million. And besidea, he also pays his taxes.
Who decides how much money is too much money? The government? If its my money , and I'm a billionaire Its none of your fucking business how much money is mine!
I think that billionaires may have a _right_ to exist but only if achieved fully legally, ethically, AND morally. However, billionaires still have the responsibility to support our government and society at least as much as the rest of us, proportional to sources of income and wealth.
"ethically, AND morally"... this might be one of the most idiotic ideas I've seen in a long time... Just tell me, who defines what is ethical and moral?
Fir everyone saying "yeah bu Reuch is worth 4 million!": So what? -- 1) he has real economic knowledge and expertise, deep & relevant experience, and the skill to communicate it. Those fees are pretty low. 2) 4 million is peanuts at his age and for California. 3) he pays his taxes. 4) he's not against capitalism and doing as well as one can for oneself. He's just against what everyone should be against - corruption, criby capitalism, oligarchy, common sense & effective, necessary regulation, and he's against the forces that have 40% of the population being at poverty levels in richest country in the world. And that we're in the 2nd gilded age. 5) if anything that's another thing pricing he's not a socialist, he's a mixed economy capitalist - capitalism where it makes sense, cost effective publice services (socialism) where it doesn't - roads, municipal services, schools, prisons, basic healthcare, police, military. And capitalism with common sense regulation, guardrails and checka and balances. I disagree though with the idea that there is no honest way to become a billionaire. The founders of Panda Express are a good example. It took them 40+ years to build their business and it's a good product. But yeah, if they could've paid their employees more and didn't (cuz too low federal minimum wage says you can pay workers cheap) maybe that's bad. Don't know if that's the case with them though.
I'm so happy I made productive decisions about my finances that changed my life forever,hoping to retire next year.. Investment should always be on any creative man's heart for success in life
Thanks for the advice! I'm new to financial planning and wasn't sure where to start. Any tips on finding a reliable financial adviser or resource to guide beginners?
Truly, investing has changed my perspective on how one can succeed in life; working multiple jobs isn't the optimal way to attain financial freedom and unfortunately, we discover this later in life. Currently earn as much as 12 grand weekly and this has improved my financial life
YES! that's exactly her name (Stacey Macken) I watched her interview on CNN News and so many people recommended her trading skills, she's an expert and I'm just starting with her....From Brisbane Australia
Wow. I'm a bit perplexed seeing her been mentioned here also Didn't know she has been good to so many people too this is wonderful, I'm in my fifth trade with her and it has been super
Notorious Terf Rowling is probably the closest to having 'earned' their money. Even she profited massively off of gov't reading programs pushing her books, of all the labor of the people printing her books, of the massive distribution networks funded with public funds, and so on. She profited off of intellectual property rights when her books were turned into movies.
Huh? If you were and author, wouldn't your books to become very popular much less made into films? You're leaving out the fact that so many people enjoyed the products that they were and still are huge bestsellers, and the movies were favorites & blockbusters. And the basic literacy and marketing "channels" you mention are hardly an exploitation of workers and society. This is one of the least examples of what Reich is talking about. Maybe what your problem with Rowling is, is her stance on trans people and her staring that. Which was unfortunate but is a separate topic.
"If Capitalism were working properly, billionaires would have gone the way of the dodo" is a factually incorrect statement. Capitalism is working perfectly and this is the logical result. Perhaps, Prof. Reich wanted to, but, for some reason, was hesitant to say, "If Democracy were working properly, billionaires would have gone the way of the dodo." According to his own classroom series, Wealth and Poverty, government regulation and not capitalism regulates markets and wealth hoarding. I'm sure others are curious why the video closes with a plug for capitalism and the, ahem, "re"direction.
You just gotta appreciate the animation they put alongside the facts he's preaching. It just makes it so much easier to digest of what would otherwise be a bland economics lecture
No. Nada. Never. Not at all. What the F*** is wrong with any human that isn't content having $999,999,999 to their name?????? How many luxury yachts, warehouses of exotic cars does 1 person need????
Robert, I have a couple books of yours and agree with you on everything I have seen you write and on your videos -- except this one nitpicky point: You suggest that if capitalism was working, we wouldn't have billionaires. But even Adam Smith in his Wealth of Nations admitted that unregulated capitalism leads to wealth inequality. His only recommendation was that societies consider a wealth tax to mitigate it, while admitting he had no solution for it. He was admitting that this was a fundamental flaw of capitalism itself! It certainly isn't something that libertarians will admit, since, as Maclean pointed out in her book, Democracy in Chains, the very intent of libertarianism itself was to provide an intellectual justification for maintaining the wealth inequality that benefits the privileged. But you are right on all else: Billionaires shouldn't exist and your own suggestions for eliminating them are important. Thank you for bringing this, and so many other wrongs in our system, public.
@@KevinThomas-ok2ev Please. 99.9% of all US law isn't explicitly IN the constitution. Where are semi-autos and cartridge ammo in the 2nd amendment? Wanna be literal? OK. Then only melee weapons and muzzle loaders are protected by 2e.
@@scifirealism5943 Not without the constitution being amended, and we have a process for that. Good luck in getting it passed. It’d be an idiotic change, to impose either a minimum OR a maximum wage.
The point definitely stands and I agree that “billionaire” is the best and most concise term to describe it right now. But I tend to dislike the term when talking about this issue because, with inflation bad enough, everyone could be a billionaire. Or at the very least, bad enough inflation could throw the proportions of what is being talked about out of whack. I wish there was a simple and understandable way of talking about relative wealth. Someone making 40 times the minimum wage may be reasonable under some circumstances, but not 300 or more. And that’s regardless of what the actual numbers are in dollars or in any other denomination.
The tax rate for the highest income bracket was 93% under President Eisenhower. We need to bring those tax rates back. With a caveat that money paid back into business growth and employee profit sharing will not be taxed. Incentive to invest their money back into the business to be in a lower tax bracket.
@@meeraj-4774 That can also be taxed, in a fair country. Change our tax laws. If/whenever unrealized capital gains (UCG) are leveraged financially in ANY way (let's say by taking a "loan" against the UCG's current value), then that UCG becomes fully taxable at the value it had at the moment it was "used" (taxed on the UCG's value exactly when the "loan" is initiated).
@@meeraj-4774 We can become a fair country if enough of us elect honest politicians who'll stop greed & corruption. Today, our gov is full of too many filthy greedy politicians who do things for their own financial or career benefit, and let their donor "friends" steal our tax monies.
If the government can figure out how much child support should be society should be able to figure out how much wealth is enough before it's well a billionaire
There's only one question to ask...and only one correct answer to it. Which is better for an economy, all conditions being equal; 100,000 individuals with $100 million each, or 100 million individuals with $100,000 each?
Capitalists spend their money on increasing their capital, and in buying the state. Only a very small portion of their profits go into productive investment. This is especially true because financial speculation and usury is more profitable than industry. That's why we are dismantling all our industry, our roads are crumbling, etc. Working class people spend their wages on the necessities of life, which increases demand in the real economy. However most of our wages actually go to landlords, monopolists and usurers, which causes a spiral of decreasing demand and a slowing economy. Which is why more than a few political economists are arguing that our present system is becoming more like feudalism in several respects. It's all geared toward unproductive rent extraction.
@@DoremiFasolatido1979 I was speaking colloquially. What actually matters is the allocation of society's finite labor. As command over that labor naturally concentrates, the result is an increasingly parasitic, empty economy, and a state apparatus ever more firmly in the hands of a ruling oligarchy. We are watching the West de-industrialize and collapse as finance continues to cannibalize society, and usher in a second medieval era. We could give 100k to each of 100,000,000 people, and although that would make things better for a time (eg the mid 20th century), it wouldn't change the underlying mechanisms and we'd end up here again in time.
No. I think once you make about 20 million, you should be given a "I won capitalism" trophy, and be unallowed to make any more money. They won! They're done.
That’s coming from a “what about me” point of view. If all the people who created wealth quit at 20 million where would that leave us. What companies would remain. I believe Robert has watched too many movies where the evil Corporations and Billionaires are involved in conspiracies to rule the world. Most take pride in product a good product that provides something consumers/the masses want and need.
Even 100 million is obscenely rich and undeserved by anyone, perhaps aside of such noble souls who actually reduced net suffering in the world. Too many to name but never enough. What I wonder is, why do these billionaires keep wanting more money? They already have all they could ever spend. I say, take a few million, and live the rest of your life doing something courageous, or at least, mind expanding.
The org RepresentUs helps people bring small changes to their towns, like anti-corruption laws, with the goal of achieving nationwide critical mass. Like eating an elephant: one bite at a time.
Please someone explain the inheritance tax. "You worked hard all your life to leave something for your kids, but Uncle Sam needs his cut first". Wasn't that money already taxed when the person was alive anyway?
@@frances-if5fp Pfft, even here he talks some rubbish: Amazon has a monopoly? Ever heard of Walmart, aliExpress, TaoBao, Temu, Target...the list goes on.
@@jogb9515 Target is an online selling platform now? And amazon suddenly became a convenience store? No, Amazon is an online company tat sels a wide variety of products, there are almost no other companies like this, and all the others are insignificant.
Simple answer: NO. Not good for anyone, really. The gulf between how we monetarily reward ‘a job well done’ - ANY job I assert - is obscene. No one’s time is worth that much more than anyone elses. The most valuable thing we have is time- and no one knows how much of that we have, including ourselves. There should be a ‘maximum wage’ as well as a ‘minimum wage’ and the difference should be at a scale we can all understand.
@edwardmeradith2419 I believe you may not realize the wealth of billionaires does not come from wages. It comes from "interest" income they receive from investments (like a stock's capital-gains, dividends, etc.). Sorry to say, capping wages using a 'maximum wage' will do almost nothing.The world is complicated, and requires complicated solutions -- like *taxing **_unrealized capital gains_** (UCG) when they're leveraged financially* in ANY way (let's say when leveraged by taking a "loan" against the UCG's current value).
@@keep-ukraine-free ‘the world is complicated and requires complicated solutions’ Absolutely- and you understand elements that I don’t pretend to understand- I wasn’t attempting to address unearned income and, what in my limited understanding, a ridiculous tax structure. My statement is more abstract in that it was meant to question how we put value on human’s limited amount of time here and reward the spending of that time working
Those that say "This person became a billionaire or multimillionaire even though their from a humble background". Sure, but they were born with phenomenal talent in business, entertainment, sports or tech that the overwhelming majority of us weren't born with. I'm not advocating laziness, & people should reap rewards from their labor. Once they reach this financial success though, they should not be allowed special tax breaks or other conduct that comes at the expense of others.
I don't relate with that,since it's not my personal experience. The "Tax The Rich" dress cost more than I made in 2022, and was about four times my salary in 2023, yet I am still not a sex worker.
Love the way you think, Robert. And you always explain and lay things out for even the most simple of us to understand. Thank you for all you do to educate us and expose the fraud, waste and abuse. Been thinking this same thing lately. Exactly how much financial (and material wealth) does one need. Pure greed. 🤑
So? 1) he has real economic knowledge and expertise, deep & relevant experience, and the skill to communicate it. Those fees are pretty low. 2) 4 million is peanuts at his age and for California. 3) he pays his taxes. 4) he's not against capitalism and doing as well as one can for oneself. He's just against what everyone should be against - corruption, criby capitalism, oligarchy, common sense & effective, necessary regulation, and he's against the forces that have 40% of the population being at poverty levels in richest country in the world. And that we're in the 2nd gilded age. 5) if anything that's another thing pricing he's not a socialist, he's a mixed economy capitalist - capitalism where it makes sense, cost effective publice services (socialism) where it doesn't - roads, municipal services, schools, prisons, basic healthcare, police, military. And capitalism with common sense regulation, guardrails and checka and balances. I disagree though with the idea that there is no honest way to become a billionaire. The founders of Panda Express are a good example. It took them 40+ years to build their business and it's a good product. But yeah, if they could've paid their employees more and didn't (cuz too low federal minimum wage says you can pay workers cheap) maybe that's bad. Don't know if that's the case with them though.
A starting point for defining “fair share” would be to acknowledge that there will always be a “richest person” (or a small group of similarly very wealthy people), and there will always be a set of “poorest people” who have essentially nothing, and with that knowledge, we can devise a progressive tax system with the goal of redistributing wealth from the top, back down through the rest of the population such that the top 0.1% have no individual net worth that is more than 5,000 times the median net worth. (In practical terms, this would allow for a handful of billionaires, but not many, and should result in zero multi-billionaires) I don’t see how allowing for individuals to have *more than* _five thousand times_ more than the median person would be _more_ fair than what I’m suggesting, so I think my proposal is a reasonable first attempt at defining a “fair share” as no more than five thousand times the average share.
It should be a law that if you make a salary of $1B+, you should be required to work your lowest employee’s job/salary for three months. So I would love to see the CEO of McDonald’s work as a minimum wage cashier while getting yelled at and abused in customer service while simultaneously making diddly squat on top of it. Welcome to your employees’ lives.
Money = Rights, it is not about envy, it is about justice. When a billionaire does something you would go to jail for and destroy your reputation they buy their way out.
If we had ACTUAL taxes on the rich and we fixed loopholes, I believe we'd still have billionaires. But THESE billionaires would much more likely have either done something tremendous for society (via hard work and or creativity) OR benefitted from some rare stroke of luck/act of God that they wouldn't be able to perpetuate the myth of the "self-made billionaire." The way we currently have it, it's more about exploitation and gaming the system than hard work or innovation.
The national debt is 34 trillion. Not only are we slaves to the bank, but our children's grandchildren, will be slaves to the bank. We are living in a guilded cage, only with an illusion of freedom...
I've been reading 'The Spirit Level' by Wilkinson and Pickett about how the extreme income inequality (second only to the U.K.) in the U.S. makes us a very sick society by nearly every measure. What good is it to be a 'rich' society when the way we divide this wealth makes us a sick society?
@@KevinThomas-ok2ev No, its a matter of maintaining the implicit social contract which holds society together. Greed and greedy people share much in common with pathogens.
I don’t know if “immoral” is the best term… I think the individual wealth of billionaires is better described as “harmful to society” rather than “immoral.” Morality is subjective and difficult to define precisely, but the harms of excessive concentration of wealth is easily demonstrated, while the benefits to society are elusive, so one is on much more solid ground arguing to redistribute wealth to reduce the harm to society, rather than arguing to do it to be morally correct.
One of the better ideas of the Nader/LaDuke ticket was a "maximum wage" of one million annually, including bonuses, golden parachutes, etc. If you can't squeeze by on that, you definitely need some priority corrections.
@@HelloWorldImSally44 “Why do some people have money when I don’t. It’s not fair, they should give that money to me.” And you guys say billionaires are evil, you literally support state sponsored theft.
I'm 100% with this video - does anyone else think intellectual property law has a place in this discussion? I understand wanting people to own a their IP long enough to profit from it ... but corporations are gaining ownership of IPs that lasts for almost a century. That does not seem "in the spirit" and does little more than incentive ownership over innovation.
I had never thought about the fact that we could, in theory, put laws for limiting the maximum amount of net worth someone can have (obviously there can be bypasses but conceptual thoughts here). Lets say we were to put a limit on wealth. Then the wealthy would have to give their money to other people, which means either they have to spread the wealth by buying things thus boosting the economy, or by giving it to their family and friends which would give more people a taste of wealth and then *they* would buy things which would help the economy. And, like you said, most wealth is inherited, meaning that in their lifetimes, a billionaire couldn't reasonably spend all their money anyways so capping the maximum wealth a person could have to be like 1 billion or 10 billion or something is very interesting.
Cheap houses in California now cost a million. I can drive through a whole neighborhood that you'd call middle class in my city and every single house is either close to a million or over. In some states that's nothing. We're talking about the extremely wealthy who have taken their wealth by hurting their workers destroying the Earth.
$4M is top 2% in the country. Is robert really better than 98% of the American population? Should we not redistribute that down to lift the other 98% up?
I work for a state agency and every year we have to take a mandatory ethics training course. In my position I have no influence or power. We are given a small limit on what can be accepted from clients under very strict guidelines. If we fail to follow these guidelines we could be fired, but those that wield the power to make laws are allowed to take hundreds of thousands of dollars from those that would benefit from those laws or them not making certain laws, without any consequences. There is definitely something wrong with this system.
We need to stop saying "lobby" and even "get the money out of politics" and start calling it what it really is - corruption.
And Bribery
Legalized bribery made legal by the people accepting the bribes.
Lobby = legal bribe
I find the term "soft corruption" is more appropriate since hard corruption involves breaking actual laws. So, for example under so-called "corporate personhood" what we understand to be corruptuon is perfectly legal. Also, with the Janus scotus decision in 2018 that stripped public worker unions of political speech, the idea that "corporate personhood" is about free speech falls flat.
@@tuberific454 legal bribery?
Fraud should amount to CRIMINAL CHARGES, not a SLAP ON THE WRIST, which is often then considered to be "the cost of doing business".
If the punishment is a fine the act is defacto legal for the rich.
Fraud should have a mandatory minimum jail time.
There should be restitution, something towards making it right for those harmed by their actions. Or just taking care of the workers versus the shareholders in the first place. Funny how money corrupts. Everything is for sale including Extreme Court Justices!
@@LordWaterBottle
EXCELLENT observation....
@@kevinmetcalfe7126 ABSOLUTELY! At most, people generally get a few dollars for years worth of lawsuits (even if what the company did was illegal). The cost to do the wrong should should be SO EXPENSIVE that it's not worth it.
And I also agree about jail time.
OR if corporations are PEOPLE (yeah, we need to fix Citizens United) then CORPORATIONS should be in jail for bad stuff done on their behalf. If not literally, then they should LOSE a LOT of rights and privileges. Those who know businesses and economy better than I do (it's sooo convoluted now) would know the best way to do so with minimal pain to most of the workers and hold those who made the bad decisions (or who mandated it) pay.
Much better to have 1000 millionaires than 1 billionaire. The disproportionate amount of power a billionaire has cannot be overstated.
So $999M good, $1B bad? Makes sense.
@@Nemesisnxt It's clear they meant 1,000 people with $1,000,000 considering that one billion dollars is 1,000 times greater than one million dollars.
Have whatever opinion you want but intentionally obtuse bad faith arguments don't help anyone.
@@Nemesisnxt 1000 individuals @ 1 million vs. 1 individual @ 1 billion. It’s a very simple concept.
@@FiniteResources7734
Like the difference between a government and a king.
@@timfuscaldo3024No, they don’t hoard their money. How do you think they increase their wealth?
The rich should just pay their taxes like the rest of us instead of playing loopholes.
They don't do what the should, that is why they are rich.
The existence of a loophole means there are no taxes which are "theirs" to pay. What does it mean to pay your taxes? It means paying what the law requires. If there's a loophole in the law that reduces your tax bill, then "paying your taxes" just means paying the lesser amount.
Very true @andrewj22 - however, the laws could always be changed to reduce the number of loopholes. But since it's often the rich that influence these laws, they keep the loopholes in place for their own benefit. Not that I believe that all rich people are only out for themselves. There's at least some that actually care about humanity and their fellow human beings... not sure if it's a very high percentage though.
@@rodsmediaroom835 The greater a person's lifestyle is beyond what's necessary, the less it makes sense to say they care about others. In other words, the rich are inherently sociopaths. Only a sociopath would hoard that much money when it could be used to do so much good for others.
Bingo. Bezos pays less a percentage in his income than you. How does that make you feel?
While i make $10.50/hr as a cashier, $900/semester as an intern, can't afford community college, and use welfare, and 43% of the population lives in poverty, then no,
I'll never support the existence of a single billionaire.
Fill out the Federal Application for Student Aide. If you are as poor as you say you are, you will qualify for the PEL grant. $7400. That will pay all books, tuition, fees at any community college with money left over. Then live off your 10.50 and hour and intern money.
Keep doing what you know is right and good things will happen. They always do.
@@douglastovey2685 I lost Pell grants because of bad grades.
When I first went to college, I had to rely on Medicaid because higher education doesn't offer healthcare.
But because welfare isn't an unconditional cash transfer, I couldn't use my health coverage to take care of my sick mom.
She was sick for six years and ultimately passed away.
The stress from this caused my grades to drop, lose financial aid, and not get it back despite the financial aid office knowing what happened to my mom.
@@douglastovey2685 I was able to win some scholarships allowing me to attend school and fall full time(cover the tuition).
I'm not giving up
@@douglastovey2685 my replies are gone.. GONE. DAMN TH-cam I TYPED SO MUCH.
@@douglastovey2685it's me scifirealism.
Greed destroys everything.
And for over a decade, Rush Limbaugh trained the right to believe that greed is good.
Also, "worth" is Not determined by money and possessions. It is determined by the spirit and principles of the person.
You are aware that the middle class draw more ss and Medicare than they pay in taxes or that the poor get free healthcare free food free money and subsidized houseing the rich on the other hand get no benefit from any of these things but pay over seventy percent of the federal taxes stop believing in Democrat lies
Democrats party of handouts that live off our children they are the ones who will inherit a bankrupt shell of a nation because you won't pay enough taxes for the handouts Democrats want why is that vote out handout Democrats before it's to late our children's future depend on it
It's not greed. Its smart investing.
These animations are fantastic. So is Robert.
Then you don't remember do nothing Reich.
You didn't mention exploiting workers.
That’s called hiring employees. You can always quit, or simply not take the job to begin with.
@KevinThomas-ok2ev not everyone can do that?
@@scifirealism5943 The only time I’ve found myself doing a job that I wasn’t allowed to quit, was when I wore a shirt with patches saying “US Army” on my chest.
@@KevinThomas-ok2ev half of the population is in poverty, millions have no savings or healthcare or college degree.
Ask rich people like Nancy Pelosi.
Jim, Rob, and Alice Walton are each worth more than $60 billion. Here in Western Pennsylvania I have seen with my own eyes estates inherited by heirs of fortunes made in steel, coal, oil, gas, timber, and beer. These people have their own private clubs and frolic at upscale resorts. Never have to work a day in their life. Don’t have to make mortgage and car payments. Much of the wealth hoarded by the elite, regardless of its source, could be very useful to the non-elite who want to go to college or start a business or buy a house at an affordable price or get their teeth fixed or pay for a much-needed operation. Serious reforms need to be made. There really needs to be a cap on how much wealth an individual can have.
Yes. You are CORRECT.
I'm a poor, self supporting college student using welfare to get by.
If I had a full ride scholarship or grant, I wouldn't need welfare and could compete with rich students.
Their is no pie. Except mother nature. That is the pie. A wealthy person can be greedy or not. A poor person can be greedy or not. Just because a person is wealthy doesn't make them greedy and just because a person is poor doesn't make them not greedy. Money is a tool we freely use to trade for this and that. Great invention really. My experience with bartering always usually leaves a little bit of a bitter taste in my mouth as if I have been taken advantage of. With money I can easily decide what works for me in terms of the value for my work. Sooo easy. And as a side note and a good practice to put things in perspective, the next time you think something is expensive try and make it yourself from scratch. I mean mining the material, processing that material, engineer and design it, throw away your mistakes, remake it 10 more times until you get something you can use and make all the tools you need to build the thing. You get my point. It's a matter of perspective. Things are actually too cheap that we have become a culture of greed and entitlement. But somehow we are not fulfilled as a whole.
A bunch of whiners like I've never seen. Go out and make your own money and stop counting other people's money and waxing on about how much of that you should have. Just pathetic. Create something!
@@MkunderaLike a new crypto currency?
Fraud should amount to CRIMINAL CHARGES, not a SLAP ON THE WRIST.
Our economy is a game. The people caught Cheating in the game should not be allowed to play it.
It does as long as it's not white collar fraud....
If it is true, that many billionaires are psychopaths, nothing said will effect them. It would take hard work, commitment and persistence. They won’t go down to poor multimillionaires easily.
Billionaires get billions by buying Supreme court judges as well it seems
Then stop supporting this channel.
So politicians on both sides become millionaires by helping the rich become billionaires.
That much is true. But add one stark truth: CONservatism in both parties is our problem.
CONservatism= No taxes on the rich, but definitely tax & screw the regular folk in our country!
THAT'S WHAT "TRICKLE-DOWN IS!"
Bingo
Everybody should pay one flat tax of 10%, regardless of income. "Thou shalt not covet" (10th Commandment). We must cut Federal spending 70%. "Thou shalt not steal" (8th Commandment).
@@davidlafleche1142Nope! That’s regressive and unfair. 10% is chump change for the filthy rich but it’s a hunk out of a poor person’s meager income.
@@davidlafleche1142 generally it should be poorer people pay a lower % of there own income, richer a higher %, as poorer individuals really cannot afford even smaller taxes while the ultra rich can easily sneeze away a much larger percent and still be fine.
“When the people shall have nothing more to eat, they will eat the rich.” - Jean Jacques Rousseau
Apparently the rich didn't learn their lesson from the French Revolution.
@@Michelle-hh5de TBF, since then, they've been untouchable for 120yrs now... they regularly slip passed every possible consequence for every possible evil they commit... they have private security, bunkers, private jets to escape with; far as they're concerned, they are and will be untouchable, and they will believe that right up until they're disabused, which is unclear if it will happen anytime soon, even if it IS inevitable...
Far more likely to eat each other these days--with basically half our political lines happily shining the shoes of the rich with their tongues in hopes of someday being rich (they won't be).
@@tHebUm18 that some MAGAts and GOPers will fight to defend the matrix is, to quote Metallica, "Sad, But True"
"The biggest con in this country is people making millions of dollars a year convincing people making $50,000 a year that people making $10,000 a year are the problem" - Brian Tyler Cohen
You are aware that the rich pay almost all the federal taxes reich lies to you by withholding information from you Democrats party of handouts that live off our children they are the ones who will inherit a bankrupt shell of a nation because you won't pay enough taxes for the handouts they want
"The selfmade billionaire" is a myth.
How it s a myth? I can cite athletes, entertainers, as well as business man who have achieved this. You are a naive and silly fool to disparge the efforts others have made just to make you feel less small...
Or a really popular artist. J. K Rowling (for a short time, anyway) comes to mind, and so does Sir Paul McCartney. If he's not a billionaire he's really close and could be tomorrow if so desired. Two in 8 billion... I'm not that good with a keyboard or a bass.
@danielwilliams8346 Who cares....I dont care about the success of someone else if they did it legally. That is why when people attack Bezos I laugh or Gates or Jobs...these guys pioneered whole industries and they DESERVE the money they earned. They are a goal for others to reach. But its not just them, athletes can make Billions, so can entertainers, like Swift. Are you telling me, THEY dont earn their money? Course not. So people need to stop with the jealousy and desire to steal...
Yeah, that Taylor Swift is such an exploiter!
@@KevinThomas-ok2evshe's certainly not self made
Quote by Honoré de Balzac: “Behind every great fortune there is a crime.”
Translation: "I am envious of people who are successful, and so I project malicious motives onto them, so that I can feel justified in hating what I cannot achieve myself."
Great question. No multiplied by billions
I see Robert Reich didn’t say anything about millionaires. Probably cause he is one.
@@Shawn-gr5ww well he deosn't have a problem with it
I still don't get how people believe that billionaires earned their money even though in reality they don't.
because they earned it, people like Robert Reich and you just don't like to admit it because you're not one!
@@juniorgod321
You truly seem to be a junior. Try actual arguments.
@@juniorgod321 unga-bunga 🦍
@@juniorgod321 Another corporate bootlicker spewing nonsense.
Whether they earned it or not, it’s their private property, and you have no right to it.
Billionaires shouldn't exist. Any property above 1 billion should be taxed at an EXTREMELY high rate.
Watch them pay their workers more fairly if that happens.
When you failed to become a billionaire your thoughts is this...😂
'property' is one thing. You can't liquidate $100,000 worth of a factory and make a down payment on a car. But that much in stocks and other volatile financials? Perhaps these should only be available after a tax man signs off on the transaction, buy, sell, or trade. Close loopholes, no shells, shadows, wights, ghost, or wisp corporate entities... and a fair tax.
@@Qoordheere77"failed"? What does any individual need billions for? Why would you want to become part of the problem?
@@Qoordheere77 then why aren't you thinking the same thing and instead are simping for people who will never care about you? 😂😂
@@Qoordheere77 My all the cockroaches are crawling out of the woodwork here. Yanks like you make me proud to be Canadian.
Personally, I think if you can't make it on $100 million, you're doing it wrong. 😎
Yep. It's about power at that point. Not whether they can make it or not.
😂
Woah!! You are making waaaaay too much sense here. 😊
i mean in the video he said that one guy bought a 60 million dollar private jet, so that + a mansion + a little invested and there goes that 100m.
You forgot one: exploiting large numbers of workers
As in they have right to live. Yes. They have right to have all that money. No.
So you believe we should just take money from people who you deem have too much? Ok commie
if they don't have a right to their money, then neither do you have a rignt to yours.
@@Psuedo-Nim Read the part of all. They can have some. But not all of it. They have way to much in comparison to rest of us. You are on the billionaire side of things.
@@karlaboerger3619 I'm on the individual freedom sort of things--letting the envious mob turn on everyone with more than them is a recipe for disaster
@Psuedo-Nim okay. Don't complain one day. You only have pennies. And trillions of dollars are hand select few.
Familial wealth has created a neo aristocracy. A super upper class of people that seem to grow wealthier every year.
And they use their financial power in many ways.
This is completely counter to our belief in a meritocracy and the benefits it bestows upon our society.
It's also not true.
Nobody has a problem with billionaires, just people that skirt the system. If you skirt taxes with off shore accounts, you're not supporting your country.
the entire point of this video is that you cant become a billionaire without doing terrible things
Criminals in expensive suits.
Well said!! But, BUT way too many ppl, especially in our capitalistic society are swept away, idolize whoever the person is driving that exotic car, wearing designer clothes, sporting big chunky gold jewelry and truly believe they must be god sent to earth.
Tell me I have this wrong. I dare you.
@@andreah6379you have it wrong
MONEY OUT OF POLITICS NOW!! 😤😤😤😤
Yes
In early twentieth century Britain there were limits on what could be spent for an election campaign. Go over the limit-automatically disqualified.
Definitely an admirable concept yet, unfortunately not very realistic given that our entire system and society is based upon Capitalism, capital and money being so pervasive and cancerous. Money for today by literally any means necessary and literally everything else be damned.
The only way to do that is to get power out of politics.
If hard work is what makes you rich, construction workers would be the billionaires.
And teachers and mothers 😮😊
Precisely. No one becomes a billionaire on his own.
I like your thinking here. The tax laws in this country need to be changed to force the ultra wealthy to pay their fair share.
the wealthy p[ay the majority of all taxes.
They do pay taxes, and I want people to stop using idiotic terms like fair share, and ACTUALLY define what they mean...WHAT do you consider fair. Dont use a slogan, use a number or percetange. THEN meaningful discussion can happen.
Even Warren Buffett agrees with you
@@shadowmancer99 Did you not watch the State of the Union speech where Joe Biden gave the percentage income tax that billionaires pay compared to the average American. I don't recall the exact percentage for billionaires, but it was ridiculously low.
that's what the Trudeau government in Canada is trying to do now, make the very wealthy at the top contribute their fair share to the common public good. but sadly, as expected, the greedy rich are vehemently opposed and have unleashed their media attack dogs and far-right wingnuts, accusing our government of being 'fascist' 'communist' 'dictator' blahblahblah 🙄 as if asking the super rich to pay a teensy bit more in taxes, instead of hiding & hoarding vast fortunes and not contributing is somehow is akin to communism 🤷🏻♂ considering they are millionaires & billionaires who can easily afford to pay up, and still be obscenely rich.
Add to all this that Billionaires just sit on most of their cash... and when money stagnates, the economy suffers. A healthy economy requires the movement of money.
I'm in favour of equality, but I'm not sure this particular argument makes sense. I doubt most billionaires are keeping piles of cash under their mattresses.
"A healthy economy requires the movement of money" -- I agree; there must be a healthy circulation of it. That reminds me of the line from Thornton Wilder's play, The Matchmaker: "Money is like manure; it's not worth a thing unless it's spread around encouraging young things to grow."
@@Avery_4272 All money, except cash stuffed under your mattress, is circulating.
Billionaires move huge amounts of money around whether it be in stocks or property or funding projects. And creating companies If they didn’t they wouldn’t have become billionaires.
@@igorzisky That money would move around just as much if it were distributed differently.
Jessie Ventura said it well: “There should be no billionaires, because it’s impossible to actually work for that much money. If you can’t live on a million dollars a month, there’s something wrong with you.”
"How much wealth is too much?" Is one of the most important questions of our current reality.
It should be "how many politicians are too much"...they add ZERO value to society. Only way to become a "billionaire" is to provide value to enormous amounts of people....Amazon, Oprah Winfrey, JK Rowling, Microsoft are perfect examples.
Why is it people blame buyers of politicians for being evil rather than politicians for being for sale in the first place?
Sure. As long as they are held to the same standards as mom and pop up the street. Pay the same 13% fed and 8% state taxes. If they go to prison when they break laws. And there are anti-corruption laws that are enforced.
Unless income is taxed in a graduated manner, as percentage, increased as income increases, the wealthy become increasingly free to spend amounts far beyond, exorbitant compared to ANY OTHER INDIVIDUAL.
This is Not in the interest of a community, as the wealthiest wields autocratic power.
Thanks for making this video more people need to see this
Fantastically communicated brilliant points - knockout! Thank you Prof Reich 🙏
Much love Robert,I adore you and use many of your videos to educate my teenage kids and their mates.
please show them thomas sowell too, so they don't grow up to be little victim whiners.
Great analysis.
The huge amount of money billionaires have came from somebody. Think about all the regular people working hard with low wages to produce things.
Yeah from their customers which they voluntarly buy.
@@meeraj-4774 Right. Like 25% interest on credit cards. It is true that a lot of people got a big advantage with good education and family wealth. And once at a high level there are plenty of ways for the rich to get richer. Regular people know very little about the complex financial system possibilities and scams. They are not in that world.
I would be somewhat satisfied if public education was properly funded and there was a medicare for all type system so everybody could at least get medical treatments when needed. Me. I am not complaining for myself. I am doing OK. I have no credit card debt but a lot of guitars. Maybe $1 billion is enough for one person.
Actually beyond a point, it's not about the money for these billionaires. It's about POWER and CONTROL!
Robert Reich has a net worth of $4,000,000 must be nice.
and? Does that mean that his message is wrong? Or is 4 millio comparable to 20 billion?
And your point explain that he is no socialist, if he was he wouldn't have 4 millions.
@@malogibeaux4946 4 million isn't a lot. It's peanuts, especially at his age AND in California. 1 billion is 1 thousand million -- hardly comparable to 4 million. And besidea, he also pays his taxes.
Reich is a Democrat. Studies show they are low in conscientiousness and give to the poor less than conservatives. He would only care about himself.
Who decides how much money is too much money? The government? If its my money , and I'm a billionaire Its none of your fucking business how much money is mine!
I think that billionaires may have a _right_ to exist but only if achieved fully legally, ethically, AND morally. However, billionaires still have the responsibility to support our government and society at least as much as the rest of us, proportional to sources of income and wealth.
"ethically, AND morally"... this might be one of the most idiotic ideas I've seen in a long time... Just tell me, who defines what is ethical and moral?
@@nadominhoca Adding value to society.
@@ProfAzimov who defines that?
Very well done. Keep 'em coming--I'm sharing far and wide!!!
100% correct.
Fir everyone saying "yeah bu Reuch is worth 4 million!": So what? --
1) he has real economic knowledge and expertise, deep & relevant experience, and the skill to communicate it. Those fees are pretty low.
2) 4 million is peanuts at his age and for California.
3) he pays his taxes.
4) he's not against capitalism and doing as well as one can for oneself. He's just against what everyone should be against - corruption, criby capitalism, oligarchy, common sense & effective, necessary regulation, and he's against the forces that have 40% of the population being at poverty levels in richest country in the world. And that we're in the 2nd gilded age.
5) if anything that's another thing pricing he's not a socialist, he's a mixed economy capitalist - capitalism where it makes sense, cost effective publice services (socialism) where it doesn't - roads, municipal services, schools, prisons, basic healthcare, police, military.
And capitalism with common sense regulation, guardrails and checka and balances.
I disagree though with the idea that there is no honest way to become a billionaire. The founders of Panda Express are a good example. It took them 40+ years to build their business and it's a good product. But yeah, if they could've paid their employees more and didn't (cuz too low federal minimum wage says you can pay workers cheap) maybe that's bad. Don't know if that's the case with them though.
I'm so happy I made productive decisions about my finances that changed my life forever,hoping to retire next year.. Investment should always be on any creative man's heart for success in life
Thanks for the advice! I'm new to financial planning and wasn't sure where to start. Any tips on finding a reliable financial adviser or resource to guide beginners?
Truly, investing has changed my perspective on how one can succeed in life; working multiple jobs isn't the optimal way to attain financial freedom and unfortunately, we discover this later in life. Currently earn as much as 12 grand weekly and this has improved my financial life
YES! that's exactly her name (Stacey Macken) I watched her interview on CNN News and so many people recommended her trading skills, she's an expert and I'm just starting with her....From Brisbane Australia
This Woman has really change the life of many people from different countries and am a testimony of her trading platform .
Wow. I'm a bit perplexed seeing her been mentioned here also Didn't know she has been good to so many people too this is wonderful, I'm in my fifth trade with her and it has been super
Notorious Terf Rowling is probably the closest to having 'earned' their money.
Even she profited massively off of gov't reading programs pushing her books, of all the labor of the people printing her books, of the massive distribution networks funded with public funds, and so on. She profited off of intellectual property rights when her books were turned into movies.
Huh? If you were and author, wouldn't your books to become very popular much less made into films? You're leaving out the fact that so many people enjoyed the products that they were and still are huge bestsellers, and the movies were favorites & blockbusters. And the basic literacy and marketing "channels" you mention are hardly an exploitation of workers and society. This is one of the least examples of what Reich is talking about.
Maybe what your problem with Rowling is, is her stance on trans people and her staring that. Which was unfortunate but is a separate topic.
No
Oprah's a billionaire. I will not hold my breath for Mr. Reich to attack her.
A 'NO' vote from Scotland.🤔
No meaning what?
However much money anyone else has is none of your business.
Ban hedge funds and monopolized industries.
"If Capitalism were working properly, billionaires would have gone the way of the dodo" is a factually incorrect statement. Capitalism is working perfectly and this is the logical result. Perhaps, Prof. Reich wanted to, but, for some reason, was hesitant to say, "If Democracy were working properly, billionaires would have gone the way of the dodo." According to his own classroom series, Wealth and Poverty, government regulation and not capitalism regulates markets and wealth hoarding. I'm sure others are curious why the video closes with a plug for capitalism and the, ahem, "re"direction.
The existence of billionaires endangers us all
You just gotta appreciate the animation they put alongside the facts he's preaching. It just makes it so much easier to digest of what would otherwise be a bland economics lecture
People have a natural instinct to kiss up and revere those that oppress them.people kissed up to kings and queens.
Thank you! Its how a lot of the financial, crookery, and even political crap goes on.
Ha! Just before I was watching this, I was watching Infographics Show on North Korea. It would seem you are correct.
No. Nada. Never. Not at all.
What the F*** is wrong with any human that isn't content having $999,999,999 to their name??????
How many luxury yachts, warehouses of exotic cars does 1 person need????
Robert, I have a couple books of yours and agree with you on everything I have seen you write and on your videos -- except this one nitpicky point:
You suggest that if capitalism was working, we wouldn't have billionaires. But even Adam Smith in his Wealth of Nations admitted that unregulated capitalism leads to wealth inequality. His only recommendation was that societies consider a wealth tax to mitigate it, while admitting he had no solution for it. He was admitting that this was a fundamental flaw of capitalism itself! It certainly isn't something that libertarians will admit, since, as Maclean pointed out in her book, Democracy in Chains, the very intent of libertarianism itself was to provide an intellectual justification for maintaining the wealth inequality that benefits the privileged.
But you are right on all else: Billionaires shouldn't exist and your own suggestions for eliminating them are important. Thank you for bringing this, and so many other wrongs in our system, public.
Of course not! Unequal distribution on wealth harms and limits the future of the economy.
We have a minimum wage, we should have a maximum wage.
Where does it authorize this in the constitution?
@@KevinThomas-ok2ev Please. 99.9% of all US law isn't explicitly IN the constitution.
Where are semi-autos and cartridge ammo in the 2nd amendment? Wanna be literal? OK. Then only melee weapons and muzzle loaders are protected by 2e.
@@matthuck378exactly.
@@KevinThomas-ok2evit can be in the constitution.
@@scifirealism5943 Not without the constitution being amended, and we have a process for that. Good luck in getting it passed. It’d be an idiotic change, to impose either a minimum OR a maximum wage.
The point definitely stands and I agree that “billionaire” is the best and most concise term to describe it right now.
But I tend to dislike the term when talking about this issue because, with inflation bad enough, everyone could be a billionaire. Or at the very least, bad enough inflation could throw the proportions of what is being talked about out of whack.
I wish there was a simple and understandable way of talking about relative wealth. Someone making 40 times the minimum wage may be reasonable under some circumstances, but not 300 or more. And that’s regardless of what the actual numbers are in dollars or in any other denomination.
The tax rate for the highest income bracket was 93% under President Eisenhower. We need to bring those tax rates back. With a caveat that money paid back into business growth and employee profit sharing will not be taxed. Incentive to invest their money back into the business to be in a lower tax bracket.
What if i tell you people like bezos still be Multibillionaire coz his income is unrealized capital gains which is not a taxable income.
@@meeraj-4774 That can also be taxed, in a fair country. Change our tax laws. If/whenever unrealized capital gains (UCG) are leveraged financially in ANY way (let's say by taking a "loan" against the UCG's current value), then that UCG becomes fully taxable at the value it had at the moment it was "used" (taxed on the UCG's value exactly when the "loan" is initiated).
@@keep-ukraine-free that fair country doesn't exist.
and because of set asides and deductions the effectitve rate was much lower.
@@meeraj-4774 We can become a fair country if enough of us elect honest politicians who'll stop greed & corruption.
Today, our gov is full of too many filthy greedy politicians who do things for their own financial or career benefit, and let their donor "friends" steal our tax monies.
If the government can figure out how much child support should be society should be able to figure out how much wealth is enough before it's well a billionaire
There's only one question to ask...and only one correct answer to it.
Which is better for an economy, all conditions being equal; 100,000 individuals with $100 million each, or 100 million individuals with $100,000 each?
Capitalists spend their money on increasing their capital, and in buying the state. Only a very small portion of their profits go into productive investment. This is especially true because financial speculation and usury is more profitable than industry. That's why we are dismantling all our industry, our roads are crumbling, etc.
Working class people spend their wages on the necessities of life, which increases demand in the real economy. However most of our wages actually go to landlords, monopolists and usurers, which causes a spiral of decreasing demand and a slowing economy.
Which is why more than a few political economists are arguing that our present system is becoming more like feudalism in several respects. It's all geared toward unproductive rent extraction.
@@rsavage-r2v They don't really buy capital, but for the most part, you're right.
But what's your answer to the question posed?
@@DoremiFasolatido1979 I was speaking colloquially. What actually matters is the allocation of society's finite labor. As command over that labor naturally concentrates, the result is an increasingly parasitic, empty economy, and a state apparatus ever more firmly in the hands of a ruling oligarchy.
We are watching the West de-industrialize and collapse as finance continues to cannibalize society, and usher in a second medieval era.
We could give 100k to each of 100,000,000 people, and although that would make things better for a time (eg the mid 20th century), it wouldn't change the underlying mechanisms and we'd end up here again in time.
What about people who become celebrity billionaires like Oprah and Taylor Swift? What about royals and dictator billionaires in other countries?
No.
I think once you make about 20 million, you should be given a "I won capitalism" trophy, and be unallowed to make any more money. They won! They're done.
Lol.
I think you’re exactly right!👍
That’s coming from a “what about me” point of view. If all the people who created wealth quit at 20 million where would that leave us. What companies would remain.
I believe Robert has watched too many movies where the evil Corporations and Billionaires are involved in conspiracies to rule the world.
Most take pride in product a good product that provides something consumers/the masses want and need.
Even 100 million is obscenely rich and undeserved by anyone, perhaps aside of such noble souls who actually reduced net suffering in the world. Too many to name but never enough. What I wonder is, why do these billionaires keep wanting more money? They already have all they could ever spend. I say, take a few million, and live the rest of your life doing something courageous, or at least, mind expanding.
how do we actually break the vicious cycle?
The org RepresentUs helps people bring small changes to their towns, like anti-corruption laws, with the goal of achieving nationwide critical mass. Like eating an elephant: one bite at a time.
Worker owned co-ops and unions. Protests.
Raise the minimum wage, welfare, UBI
Please someone explain the inheritance tax. "You worked hard all your life to leave something for your kids, but Uncle Sam needs his cut first".
Wasn't that money already taxed when the person was alive anyway?
Any inheritance under 2 million. isn't taxed. Something like that.
@@CBT5777 That doesn't change anything.
@@DJ_Force Sure it does.
@@CBT5777 Why? How?
I thought this was going to be an anti-capitalist rant, but very good points.
R.Reich never rants...he proves the validity of his assertions.
@@frances-if5fp Pfft, even here he talks some rubbish: Amazon has a monopoly? Ever heard of Walmart, aliExpress, TaoBao, Temu, Target...the list goes on.
@@jogb9515 Target is an online selling platform now? And amazon suddenly became a convenience store?
No, Amazon is an online company tat sels a wide variety of products, there are almost no other companies like this, and all the others are insignificant.
It was originally said that monopolies were not supposed to exist in the United States because it denied free enterprise!!!!!!!!
Simple answer: NO. Not good for anyone, really. The gulf between how we monetarily reward ‘a job well done’ - ANY job I assert - is obscene. No one’s time is worth that much more than anyone elses. The most valuable thing we have is time- and no one knows how much of that we have, including ourselves. There should be a ‘maximum wage’ as well as a ‘minimum wage’
and the difference should be at a scale we can all understand.
So you love communism is all I get from your post
@edwardmeradith2419 I believe you may not realize the wealth of billionaires does not come from wages. It comes from "interest" income they receive from investments (like a stock's capital-gains, dividends, etc.). Sorry to say, capping wages using a 'maximum wage' will do almost nothing.The world is complicated, and requires complicated solutions -- like *taxing **_unrealized capital gains_** (UCG) when they're leveraged financially* in ANY way (let's say when leveraged by taking a "loan" against the UCG's current value).
@@keep-ukraine-free
‘the world is complicated and requires complicated solutions’
Absolutely- and you understand elements that I don’t pretend to understand- I wasn’t attempting to address unearned income and, what in my limited understanding, a ridiculous tax structure.
My statement is more abstract in that it was meant to question how we put value on human’s limited amount of time here and reward the spending of that time working
Those that say "This person became a billionaire or multimillionaire even though their from a humble background". Sure, but they were born with phenomenal talent in business, entertainment, sports or tech that the overwhelming majority of us weren't born with. I'm not advocating laziness, & people should reap rewards from their labor. Once they reach this financial success though, they should not be allowed special tax breaks or other conduct that comes at the expense of others.
No “ Eat the rich “
Careful. "Rich" is subjective. Compared to many in the world YOU are one of the rich. We need freedom and honesty, not class envy.
I don't relate with that,since it's not my personal experience. The "Tax The Rich" dress cost more than I made in 2022, and was about four times my salary in 2023, yet I am still not a sex worker.
Acts of the Apostles chapter 4 "There was not a needy person among them...proceeds of what was sold...distributed to each as any had need."
Notice that this was true charity, not governmental confiscation at gunpoint and under threat of prison?
@KevinThomas-ok2ev notice that today's wealthy do not exhibit this charity.
Also that government is not forced charity, it is paying for services.
Love the way you think, Robert. And you always explain and lay things out for even the most simple of us to understand. Thank you for all you do to educate us and expose the fraud, waste and abuse.
Been thinking this same thing lately. Exactly how much financial (and material wealth) does one need. Pure greed. 🤑
It's obscene, no one deserves that much money. 900.000 million max, excess goes to public services to make life better for ALL!
that would be utopia, unfortunately greed is a core trait of humanity
How much money should I be allowed to take away from you, if you have way more than I do?
Inevitably, capitalism always undoes itself.
Robert Reich has a net worth of $4 million.
And makes anywhere from $37,500 to $100,000 for a thirty minute lecture. Real man of the people there.
@@KevinThomas-ok2evI don't have a problem with that.
So?
1) he has real economic knowledge and expertise, deep & relevant experience, and the skill to communicate it. Those fees are pretty low.
2) 4 million is peanuts at his age and for California.
3) he pays his taxes.
4) he's not against capitalism and doing as well as one can for oneself. He's just against what everyone should be against - corruption, criby capitalism, oligarchy, common sense & effective, necessary regulation, and he's against the forces that have 40% of the population being at poverty levels in richest country in the world. And that we're in the 2nd gilded age.
5) if anything that's another thing pricing he's not a socialist, he's a mixed economy capitalist - capitalism where it makes sense, cost effective publice services (socialism) where it doesn't - roads, municipal services, schools, prisons, basic healthcare, police, military.
And capitalism with common sense regulation, guardrails and checka and balances.
I disagree though with the idea that there is no honest way to become a billionaire. The founders of Panda Express are a good example. It took them 40+ years to build their business and it's a good product. But yeah, if they could've paid their employees more and didn't (cuz too low federal minimum wage says you can pay workers cheap) maybe that's bad. Don't know if that's the case with them though.
I agree with this except the inheritance tax part. That money passed down to relatives has already been taxed.
Please define a fair share.
A starting point for defining “fair share” would be to acknowledge that there will always be a “richest person” (or a small group of similarly very wealthy people), and there will always be a set of “poorest people” who have essentially nothing, and with that knowledge, we can devise a progressive tax system with the goal of redistributing wealth from the top, back down through the rest of the population such that the top 0.1% have no individual net worth that is more than 5,000 times the median net worth. (In practical terms, this would allow for a handful of billionaires, but not many, and should result in zero multi-billionaires)
I don’t see how allowing for individuals to have *more than* _five thousand times_ more than the median person would be _more_ fair than what I’m suggesting, so I think my proposal is a reasonable first attempt at defining a “fair share” as no more than five thousand times the average share.
It should be a law that if you make a salary of $1B+, you should be required to work your lowest employee’s job/salary for three months.
So I would love to see the CEO of McDonald’s work as a minimum wage cashier while getting yelled at and abused in customer service while simultaneously making diddly squat on top of it. Welcome to your employees’ lives.
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both."
Louis D. Brandeis
Money = Rights, it is not about envy, it is about justice. When a billionaire does something you would go to jail for and destroy your reputation they buy their way out.
I think they should be allowed to exist but tax excessive wealth
If we had ACTUAL taxes on the rich and we fixed loopholes, I believe we'd still have billionaires.
But THESE billionaires would much more likely have either done something tremendous for society (via hard work and or creativity)
OR
benefitted from some rare stroke of luck/act of God that they wouldn't be able to perpetuate the myth of the "self-made billionaire."
The way we currently have it, it's more about exploitation and gaming the system than hard work or innovation.
Excessive wealth? How much money should I be allowed to take away from you, if you have way more than I do?
If you are broke then it's your own damn fault
How does this not just make everyone a debt slave to banks?
Actually your money is a note of debt.
The national debt is 34 trillion.
Not only are we slaves to the bank, but our children's grandchildren, will be slaves to the bank.
We are living in a guilded cage, only with an illusion of freedom...
I've been reading 'The Spirit Level' by Wilkinson and Pickett about how the extreme income inequality (second only to the U.K.) in the U.S. makes us a very sick society by nearly every measure. What good is it to be a 'rich' society when the way we divide this wealth makes us a sick society?
Billionaires should not exist. You dont need a billion or more to be happy. That money should be taxed and used for the common good
From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs?
Not even $100 million.
Communism is a tempting philosophy for losers.
@@KevinThomas-ok2ev No, its a matter of maintaining the implicit social contract which holds society together. Greed and greedy people share much in common with pathogens.
How much money should I be allowed to take away from you, if you have way more than I do?
There is no sense of "enough" with billionaires. Whatever they have, they want more. The term is "spoiled children"...
Nope...you hit a billion dollars and you have 30 days to decide: your money or your life...reset the balance for the good of free market capitalism!
Billionaires have the right to exist when Millionaires become the standard for poverty.
That much personal wealth is immoral.
Why?
According to whom? Where does this moral authority derive from to begin with?
Yes.
I don’t know if “immoral” is the best term… I think the individual wealth of billionaires is better described as “harmful to society” rather than “immoral.” Morality is subjective and difficult to define precisely, but the harms of excessive concentration of wealth is easily demonstrated, while the benefits to society are elusive, so one is on much more solid ground arguing to redistribute wealth to reduce the harm to society, rather than arguing to do it to be morally correct.
How much money should I be allowed to take away from you, if you have way more than I do?
One of the better ideas of the Nader/LaDuke ticket was a "maximum wage" of one million annually, including bonuses, golden parachutes, etc. If you can't squeeze by on that, you definitely need some priority corrections.
No. Next question
You are literally watching a video about someone who is in the 1% complaining that there are people richer than him.
@@Shawn-gr5wwnope try again
@@HelloWorldImSally44 “Why do some people have money when I don’t. It’s not fair, they should give that money to me.” And you guys say billionaires are evil, you literally support state sponsored theft.
Millions of Americans who dont have a pot to piss in vote for (R) who will make things even worse for them. Dumber than dumb.
It is a relief to hear someone with credibility say what I've been saying for years.
Did you just use the word credibility to describe Reich. He literally is incapable of telling the truth.
Robert Reich is such a national treasure and does a fabulous job educating us.
I'm 100% with this video - does anyone else think intellectual property law has a place in this discussion? I understand wanting people to own a their IP long enough to profit from it ... but corporations are gaining ownership of IPs that lasts for almost a century. That does not seem "in the spirit" and does little more than incentive ownership over innovation.
We need a way to get the money back. They stole it from US.
I had never thought about the fact that we could, in theory, put laws for limiting the maximum amount of net worth someone can have (obviously there can be bypasses but conceptual thoughts here). Lets say we were to put a limit on wealth. Then the wealthy would have to give their money to other people, which means either they have to spread the wealth by buying things thus boosting the economy, or by giving it to their family and friends which would give more people a taste of wealth and then *they* would buy things which would help the economy. And, like you said, most wealth is inherited, meaning that in their lifetimes, a billionaire couldn't reasonably spend all their money anyways so capping the maximum wealth a person could have to be like 1 billion or 10 billion or something is very interesting.
Does Robert really need $4M, or can he survive on a measly $900k?
Cheap houses in California now cost a million. I can drive through a whole neighborhood that you'd call middle class in my city and every single house is either close to a million or over. In some states that's nothing. We're talking about the extremely wealthy who have taken their wealth by hurting their workers destroying the Earth.
$4M is top 2% in the country. Is robert really better than 98% of the American population? Should we not redistribute that down to lift the other 98% up?
@@RebeccaMorris-v6m You need to choose better heroes.
How exactly does that invalidates the message? And do you seriously think that 4 million is akin to multiple billions?
I work for a state agency and every year we have to take a mandatory ethics training course. In my position I have no influence or power. We are given a small limit on what can be accepted from clients under very strict guidelines. If we fail to follow these guidelines we could be fired, but those that wield the power to make laws are allowed to take hundreds of thousands of dollars from those that would benefit from those laws or them not making certain laws, without any consequences. There is definitely something wrong with this system.
Great video.