There is truth in the oft quoted phrase “It takes money
to make money.” A more relevant
manifestation of that sentiment might be “It takes wealth to make wealth.” Everyone sees money flow through their hands,
but it is only those who can accumulate more than they need to cover the
fundamental needs of food, clothing, and shelter who are in a position to
create wealth and use it to create more wealth.
What is not immediately obvious is that wealth seems to grow even faster
as it becomes larger, allowing significant fortunes to increase in an unbounded
manner.
This dynamic is explained in Thomas Piketty’s book Capital in the Twenty-First Century.
Piketty has made his charts and tables available here. He defines capital as
anything that has a market value, making the terms wealth and capital
synonymous. His basic conclusion is that
the rate of earnings from capital has always exceeded the growth in income
(equivalent to the rate of growth in GDP) except in unusual circumstances where
high rates of taxation were in effect.
Consider this chart of the return on capital (pretax) in Britain over
the past few centuries.
The “real” rate of return differs from the “observed” by
Piketty’s estimate of the cost of managing the assets earning income. What is startling is the constancy of this value
of about 5% over time. At early times,
wealth was mostly in the form of land when agriculture was a dominant component
of the economy. Over time, agriculture
diminished in importance and was superseded by real estate and financial
instruments such as stocks and bonds, yet the rate of return remained relatively
constant.
The anomalous period was the era of the Great Depression
and the two world wars. Much wealth was
destroyed in that calamitous period, but what wealth there was was highly
valued. It was immediately after this
era that periods of high economic growth were observed as regions devastated by
war rebuilt themselves. High growth in
GDP translates into high growth in incomes, allowing more people to pass that
transition point where they earned enough to be able to save and accumulate
resources. It can truly be said that
this was the period in which a middle class began to be formed. Home ownership became more widespread and
that became the dominant contributor to the growth of wealth in this middle
class.
The growth of a middle class is the positive aspect of
Piketty’s economic history. The negative
aspect arises from the historical fact that high rates of growth of GDP are an
historical anomaly. Up until World War I
the rate of economic growth was on the order of 1-2%. The higher rates that we have become
accustomed to in the postwar years are apparently returning to the historical
norm. Given that income growth will fall
far behind growth in wealth from the higher income from wealth, we face a
situation where the wealthy will become ever wealthier while the rest get left
behind.
Consider this plot of the top income groups in the US
over time (top 1%, top 1-4%, top 5-10%).
The volatility is in the income possessed by the top
1%. It peaks dramatically just prior to
the stock market crash and the great depression, falls significantly during the
high-tax and highly-regulated era associated with World War II and its
aftermath, and then around 1980 the top 1% begins to again grow rapidly with
time. There are a number of things
operative that explain this increase: taxes were lowered, policies were put in
place that favored the wealthy, and the rate of growth began to slow.
Remember that the media quotes total GDP whereas the
number of interest is per capita GDP. If
population grows by 1% and the quoted GDP grows by 1% there is no actual growth
in average individual income. Consider
this plot of per capita GDP growth in Western Europe and North America over
time.
Western Europe with its high taxes and high social benefits
has been, and still is, creating income at a greater rate than the more economically
“liberated” new world. Note that the
high-growth postwar years appear to be replaced by an extended period where
growth is descending back to the historical norm.
Given this data we would expect to see growth in income
inequality. In fact, it turns out the
growth in inequality is even worse than one might imagine. Piketty tells us that not all wealth is
equal. He concludes that the larger the amount
of wealth possessed, the faster it will likely grow.
Piketty looked at two sources of information on how the
investments of the very wealthy performed over time. The first involves the magazine Forbes and its annual ranking of the
wealth of the world’s billionaires. This
is an imperfect source of information for detailed analysis, but it does allow
him to draw a conclusion:
“….the largest fortunes grew much more rapidly than average wealth. This is the new fact that the Forbes rankings help us bring to light, assuming they are reliable.”
Piketty provides a few specific examples.
“Between 1990 and 2010, the fortune of Bill Gates….the very incarnation of entrepreneurial wealth….increased from $4 billion to $50 billion. At the same time, the fortune of Liliane Bettencourt—the heiress of L’Oréal, the world leader in cosmetics…..increased from $2 billion to $25 billion, again according to Forbes. Both fortunes thus grew at an annual rate of more than 13 percent from 1990 to 2010, equivalent to a real return on capital of 10 or 11 percent after correcting for inflation.”
“In other words, Liliane Bettencourt, who never worked a day in her life, saw her fortune grow exactly as fast as that of Bill Gates, the high-tech pioneer, whose wealth has incidentally continued to grow just as rapidly since he stopped working. Once a fortune is established, the capital grows according to a dynamic of its own, and it can continue to grow at a rapid pace for decades simply because of its size….money tends to reproduce itself.”
There is nothing mysterious about this growth in
wealth. It is simply due to the fact
that the very wealthy have the resources to expend in wisely managing their
wealth—another variation on the thesis that it takes wealth to make
wealth. To make this point more clear Piketty
looks at a more robust source: financial reports from university
endowments—which range in size from the merely large to the astonishingly
large.
“….US universities publish regular, reliable, and detailed reports on their endowments, which can be used to study the annual returns each institution obtains. This is not possible with most private fortunes. In particular, these data have been collected since the late 1970s by the National Association of College and University Business Officers, which has published voluminous statistical surveys every year since 1979.”
Picketty’s analysis of this data is summarized in this
table:
Piketty draws two conclusions from this table. The first is that the rate of return for
university endowments is considerably higher than that of wealth in general,
and is consistent with the picture obtained from the Forbes surveys of personal wealth.
The second conclusion is that the larger the endowment, the larger is
the likely rate of return on investment.
“The higher we go in the endowment hierarchy, the more often we find ‘alternative investment strategies,’ that is, very high yield investments such as shares in private equity funds and unlisted foreign stocks (which require great expertise), hedge funds, derivatives, real estate, and raw materials, including energy, natural resources and related products (these too require specialized expertise and offer very high potential yields).”
“Concretely, Harvard currently spends nearly $100 million a year to manage its endowment. This munificent sum goes to pay a team of topnotch portfolio managers capable of identifying the best investment opportunities around the world.”
Piketty also arrives at this interesting conclusion about
investment risk and return on investment:
“….the year-to-year volatility of these returns does not seem to be any greater for the largest endowments than for the smaller ones….In other words, the higher returns of the largest endowments are not due primarily to greater risk but to a more sophisticated investment strategy that consistently produces better results.”
The very wealthy also have options available to them to
protect their wealth from both taxes and foolish children who might squander
it, and thus preserve it for generations.
“….wealthy people are constantly coming up with new and ever more sophisticated legal structures to house their fortunes. Trust funds, foundations and the like often serve to avoid taxes, but they also constrain the freedom of future generations to do as they please with the associated assets. In other words, the boundary between fallible individuals and eternal foundations is not as clear-cut as sometimes thought.”
We seem to have entered a long-term period of low growth
which translates into small gains in income—at best—for the majority, while
large fortunes have accumulated that are in a position to grow without
bound. Piketty fears, as we should also,
that this disparity in wealth will be a destabilizing factor in society.
Large fortunes have become nearly immune to taxation
because most of the income is derived from capital rather than wages. Piketty’s long-term solution would be a small
progressive tax on wealth, one that would still allow wealth to grow, but not
in so robust a fashion. If average income
is to grow at 1-2% per year, it is hard to justify a situation where large
fortunes—particularly inherited fortunes— grow at 10% per year.
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