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Lukas Baker's avatar

Agreed, but I think our conversations around wealth and income are missing a broader point. Concentrating wealth means concentrating decision making power in our economies, which in turn means that the actual productive capacity of our economies artificially gets pulled toward serving needs that do not necessarily serve a broad public interest. Examples of these kinds of industries include the building of mega yachts and mansions, the private jet industry, much of the financial industry, and so on. The people in these industries could be working on things that benefit a larger share of the population, but they don't. Why? Because the existance of wealth inequality inflates wages for industries that serve the needs of the very rich.

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Hoang Cuong Nguyen's avatar

This is a really great article Noah!

I think a good book for reference is History's Greatest Heist: The Looting of Russia by the Bolsheviks: https://www.amazon.com/Historys-Greatest-Heist-Looting-Bolsheviks/dp/0300135580. In this book, Sean McMeekin pointed out that Lenin actually did try to liquidate all of the Tsar's assets, savings and stocks of companies, even the Church holdings in Russia to fight the Russian Civil War and spread the revolution; but by the time he actually did it, all of these things became worthless due to the Revolution's upheaval (and also due to the effect that you mentioned earlier!). Only the Tsar's gold reserve was actually liquid, and the Bolsheviks nearly ran out of it in just 2 years!

A great documentary you could also look into is World War One - Episode 8 from StarMedia (a Russian movie firm): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzqRtYd911A&list=PLwGzY25TNHPAdEyAB5NwQsNC6ujpW90Pf&index=8&ab_channel=StarMediaEN. In this episode, a lot of Russian people thought that with the Tsar's abdication, now they don't need to work anymore (since it was a social revolution). This led to large-scale famine that Russia had not seen before, even during WW1!

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