Wealth from the old English word "weal", which means "well-being" or "welfare".
The term was originally an adjective to describe the possession of such qualities.
"Wealth" has come to mean an abundance of items of economic value, or the state of
controlling or possessing such items, and encompasses money, real
estate and personal property. In many countries wealth is also measured by reference to
access to essential services such as health care, or the possession of crops and livestock. An individual who is wealthy, affluent, or
rich is someone who has accumulated substantial wealth relative to others in their society or reference group. In economics,
wealth refers to the value of assets owned minus the
value of liabilities owed at a point in time.
'Wealth' refers to some accumulation of resources, whether abundant or not. 'Richness' refers to an abundance of
such resources. A wealthy (or rich) individual, community, or nation thus has more resources than a poor one. Richness can also
refer at least basic needs being met with abundance widely shared. The opposite of wealth is destitution. The opposite of richness is poverty.
The term implies a social contract on establishing and maintaining ownership in relation to such items which can be invoked with little or no effort and expense on the part of
the owner (see means of protection).
The concept of wealth is relative and not only varies between societies, but will often vary between different sections or
regions in the same society. A personal net worth of US $1,000,000 in most parts of the United
States would certainly place a person among the wealthiest citizens. However, such amounts would constitute an extraordinary
amount of wealth in impoverished developing countries.
Some of the wealthiest countries in the world are the United States, the
United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland,
Norway, Japan, Kuwait,
United Arab Emirates (especially Dubai),
South Korea, Germany, The
Netherlands, Belgium, France, Israel, Taiwan, Australia, Singapore, Canada, Finland, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Italy, New Zealand, Iceland, Monaco, Luxembourg,
Liechenstein and Switzerland, the larger of which are
in the G8. All of the above countries, except United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, are considered
developed countries.
Anthropological views of wealth
Anthropology characterizes societies, in part, based on a society's concept of wealth,
and the institutional structures and power used to protect this wealth. Several types
are defined below. They can be viewed as an evolutionary progression. Many young adolescents have become wealthy from the
inheritance of their families.
The interpersonal concept of wealth
Early hominids seem to have started with incipient ideas of wealth, similar to that of the
great apes. But as tools, clothing, and other mobile
infrastructural capital became important to survival (especially in hostile
biomes), ideas such as the inheritance of wealth,
political positions, leadership, and ability to control group
movements (to perhaps reinforce such power) emerged. Neandertal societies had pooled
funerary rites and cave painting which implies at least a
notion of shared assets that could be spent for social purposes, or preserved for social purposes. Wealth may have been
collective.
Wealth as the accumulation of non-necessities
Humans back to and including the Cro-Magnons seem to have
had clearly defined rulers and status hierarchies. Digs in Russia have revealed elaborate funeral clothing on a pair of children buried
there over 35,000 years ago. This indicates a considerable accumulation of wealth by some individuals or families. The high
artisan skill also suggest the capacity to direct specialized labor to tasks that are not of any obvious utility to the group's survival.
Wealth as control of arable land
Irrigation and urbanization, especially in ancient
Sumer and later Egypt, are thought to have triggered a shift that
unified the ideas of wealth and control of land and agriculture. To feed a large stable population, it was possible and necessary to achieve universal
cultivation and city-state protection. The notion of the
state and the notion of war are said to have
emerged at this time. Tribal cultures were formalized into what we would call feudal systems,
and many rights and obligations were assumed by the monarchy and related aristocracy. Protection of infrastructural capital built up
over generations became critical: city walls, irrigation
systems, sewage systems, aqueducts, buildings, all impossible to replace within a single generation,
and thus a matter of social survival to maintain. The social capital of entire societies
was often defined in terms of its relation to infrastructural capital (e.g.
castles or forts or an allied monastery, cathedral or temple), and
natural capital, (i.e. the land that supplied locally grown food). Agricultural economics continues these
traditions in the analyses of modern agricultural policy and related ideas of
wealth, e.g. the ark of taste model of agricultural wealth.
The capitalist notion of wealth
Industrialization emphasized the role of technology. Many jobs were automated.
Machines replaced some workers while other workers became more specialized. Labour
specialization became critical to economic success. However, physical capital, as it came to be known, consisting of both the natural capital (raw materials from nature) and the infrastructural capital (facilitating technology), became the focus of the analysis of
wealth. Adam Smith saw wealth creation as the combination of materials, labour, land, and
technology in such a way as to capture a profit (excess above the cost of production).[1] The theories of David Ricardo,
John Locke, John Stuart Mill, and later,
Karl Marx, in the 18th century and 19th century built on these views of wealth that we now call classical economics and Marxian economics (see
labor theory of value). Marx distinguishes in the Grundrisse between
material wealth and human wealth, defining human wealth as "wealth in human relations"; land and labour were the source of all
material wealth.
Other concepts of wealth
Global wealth
Michel Foucault commented that the concept of Man as an
aggregate did not exist before the 18th century. The shift from the analysis of an individual's wealth to the concept of an
aggregation of all men is implied in the concepts of political economy and then
economics. This transition took place as a result of a cultural bias inherent in the Enlightenment. Wealth was seen
as an objective fact of living as a human being in a society.
Not a zero-sum game
Regardless of whether one defines wealth as the sum total of all currency, the M1 money
supply, or a broader measure which includes money, securities, and property, the supply of wealth, while limited, is not
fixed. Thus, there is room for people to gain wealth without taking from others, and wealth is not a zero-sum game in the long term. Many things can affect the creation and destruction of wealth including size of
the work force, production efficiency, available resource endowments, inventions, innovations, and availability of capital.
However, at any given point in time, there is a limited amount of wealth which exists. That is to say, it is fixed in the
short term. People who study short term issues see wealth as a zero sum game and concentrate on the distribution of wealth, whereas people who study long term issues see wealth as a non-zero sum game and
concentrate on wealth creation. Other people put equal emphasis on both the creation and the
distribution of wealth. It has been theorized, for example, by Robert Wright, among others, that society becomes increasingly
non-zero-sum as it becomes more complex, specialized, and interdependent.
One's attitude towards this issue affects the design of the social or
economic system that one prefers.
The non-normative concept of wealth
Neoclassical economics tries to be non-normative for the most part, to be
objective and free of value statements. If it is successful, then wealth would be defined in such a way that it would not be
preconceived to be either positive or negative. This objective has not always been the case. In prior eras wealth was assumed to
be a set of means of persuasion.
It was often seen as self-interested arguments by the powerful explaining why they should remain in power. In The Prince, Niccolò Machiavelli had commented in that earlier
era on the prudent use of wealth, and the need to tolerate some cruelty and vice in the use of it, in order to maintain appearances of strength and power.
Jane Jacobs in the 1960s and 70s offered the observation that there were two different
moral syndromes that were common attitudes to wealth and power, and that the one more
associated with guardianship did in fact require a degree of ostentatious
conspicuous consumption if only to impress others.
This logic is almost entirely absent from neoclassical economics, which in its
extreme form argues for the abolition of any political economy apart from the
service markets wherein favours may be bought and sold at will, including political ones - the
so-called political choice theory popular in the U.S.A.. While it is entirely likely that such assumptions apply in the subcultures that
dominate modern discourse on technical economics and
especially macroeconomics, the less technical notions of wealth and power that are
implied in the older theories of economics and ideas of wealth, still continue as daily facts of life.
Non financial wealth
The 21st century view is that many definitions of wealth can exist and continue to
co-exist. Some people talk about measuring the more general concept of well-being. This
is a difficult process but many believe it possible - human development theory
being devoted to this. Furthermore, Manoj Sharma [1], the head of DifferWorld's [2]faculty makes a very strong case of the importance of factoring in both financial
wealth and non-financial wealth as a measure of True Wealth. His definition of True Wealth being a combination of financial,
mental, emotional, physical and spiritual wealth. Although these alternative measures of wealth exist, they tend to be
overshadowed and influenced by the dominant money supply and banking system. For more on the modern notions of wealth and their interaction see the article on political economy.
Wealth as time
According to Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich
Dad, Poor Dad, wealth is nothing more than a measurement of time. It is how long you can continue to live your
lifestyle without any adjustments when you cease working. For instance if you have a burn rate of $2,000 a month in bills and
expenses and $4,000 in the bank and you have no other forms of income, then you have a wealth measurement of 2 months. If however
you are simply able to increase other forms of income, those which are not the result of trading time for money, to a point where
they exceed your monthly burn rate, then you will effectively reach infinite wealth.
Sustainable wealth as a measure of well-being
Sustainable wealth is defined by the author of Creating Sustainable Wealth, Elizabeth M Parker, as meeting the
individual’s personal, social and environmental needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs. This definition of sustainable wealth comes from the marriage of sustainability as defined by the Brundtland Commission
and wealth defined as a measure of well-being.
Sustainable wealth
According to the author of Wealth Odyssey, Larry R. Frank Sr, wealth is what sustains you when you are not working. It
is net worth, not income, which is important when you retire or are unable to work (premature loss of income due to injury or
illness is actually a risk management issue). The key question is how long would a certain wealth last? Ongoing withdrawal
research has sustainable withdrawal rates anywhere between approximately 3 percent and 8 percent, depending on the research’s
assumptions. Time, how long wealth might last, then becomes a function of how many times does the percentage withdrawal rate go
into all the assets. Example: withdrawing 3 percent a year into 100 percent equals 33.3 years; 4 percent equals 25 years; 8
percent equals 12.5 years, etc. This ignores any growth, which presumably would be used to offset the effects of inflation.
Growth greater than the withdrawal rate would extend the time assets may last, while negative growth would reduce the time assets
may last. Clearly a lower withdrawal rate is more conservative. Knowing this helps you determine how much wealth you need also.
Example: you know you will need $40,000 a year and use a 4 percent withdrawal rate, then you need to use 5 percent and therefore
need $800,000, etc. This simple “wealth rule” helps you estimate both the time and the amount.
Wealth in Buddhism
According to the Buddha, the act of "giving" leads to being reborn in happy states and
material wealth. Alternatively, lack of "giving" leads to unhappy states and poverty. The exquisite paradox in Buddhism is that the more we give - and the more we give without seeking something in return - the more wealthy
(in the broadest sense of the word) we will become.
Buckminster Fuller's Notion of Wealth
In section
1075.25 of Synergetics,
Buckminster Fuller defined wealth as "the measurable degree of established operative
advantage". In Critical Path[2] Fuller described his notion
as that which "realistically protected, nurtured, and accommodated X numbers of human lives for Y number of forward days".
Philosophically, Fuller viewed "real wealth" as human know-how and know-what which he pointed out is always increasing.
The creation of wealth
Wealth is created through several means.
- Natural resources can be harvested and sold to those who want them.
- Material can be changed into something more valuable through proper application of knowledge, skill, labor and
equipment.
- Better production methods also create additional wealth by allowing faster creation of wealth.
For example, consider our early ancestors. Building a house from trees created something of greater value for the builder.
Hunting and firewood created food and fed a growing family. Agriculture converted labor into more food and resources. Continuing
use of resources and effort has allowed many descendants to own much more than that first house.
This is still true today. It is more obvious to those working with physical material than to a service worker or knowledge
worker. A cubicle worker may not be aware in how many ways their work is creating something which is of more value to their
employer than the amount that employer paid to produce it. This profit creates wealth for the owners of the organization. The
process also provides income for employees, and suppliers, and it makes the continued existence of the organization possible.
There are many different philosophies on wealth creation. Many of the newer ones are based on investing in real estate,
stocks, businesses and more. Donald Trump, Robert
Kiyosaki, among others have written many books on this subject. There are also many blogs that talk about these concepts
in an informal setting such as Steve Pavlina and MindsofWealth.com
The limits to wealth creation
There is a debate in economic literature, usually referred to as the limits to growth debate in which the ecological
impact of growth and wealth creation is considered. Many of the wealth creating activities mentioned above (cutting down trees,
hunting, farming) have an impact on the environment around us. Sometimes the impact is positive (for example, hunting when herd
populations are high) and sometimes the impact is negative (for example, hunting when herd populations are low).
Most researchers feel that sustained environmental impacts can have an effect on the whole ecosystem. They claim that the
accumulated impacts on the ecosystem put a theoretical limit on the amount of wealth that can be created. They draw on archeology
to cite examples of cultures that they claim have disappeared because they grew beyond the ability of their ecosystems to support
them.
Others are more optimistic (or, as the first group might claim, more naïve). They claim that although unrestrained
wealth-creating activities may have localized environmental impact, large scale ecological effects are either minor or
non-existent; or that even if global scale ecological effects exist, human ingenuity will always find ways of adapting to them,
so that there is no ecological limit to the amount of growth or wealth that this planet will sustain[citation needed].
More fundamentally, the limited surface of Earth places limits on the space, population and natural resources available to the
human race, at least until such time as large-scale space travel is a realistic proposition.
The difference between income and wealth
Wealth is a stock, meaning that it is a total accumulation over time. Income is a flow,
meaning it is a rate of change. Income represents the increase in wealth, expenses the decrease in wealth. If you limit wealth to
net worth, then mathematically net income (income minus expenses) can be thought of as the
first derivative of wealth, representing the change in wealth over a period of time.
The distribution of wealth
-
Capitalism asserts that all wealth is earned, not distributed. It can only be distributed
after it is forcibly seized from the earners (usually in the form of tax). Wealth acquired this way is then distributed. Thus
this section is concerned with the anti-capitalist conception of wealth, namely that all wealth is collective and distributed
among individuals.
Different societies have different opinions about wealth distribution and about the obligations related to wealth, but from the era of the tribal society to the
modern era, there have been means of moderating the acquisition and use of wealth.
In ecologically rich areas such as those inhabited by the Haida in the Cascadia ecoregion, traditions like potlatch kept wealth relatively
evenly distributed, requiring leaders to buy continued status and respect with giveaways of wealth to the poorer members of
society. Such traditions make what are today often seen as government responsibilities into
matters of personal honour.
In modern societies, the tradition of philanthropy exists. Large donations from funds
created by wealthy individuals are highly visible, although small contributions by many people also offer a wide variety of
support within a society. The continued existence of organizations which survive on donations indicate that modern Western
society has at least some level of philanthropy.
Furthermore, in today's societies, much wealth distribution and redistribution is the result of government policies and
programs. Government policies like the progressivity or regressivity of the tax system can redistribute wealth to the poor or the
rich respectively. Government programs like “disaster relief” transfer wealth to people that have suffered loss due to a natural
disaster. Social security transfers wealth from the young to the old. Fighting a war transfers wealth to certain sectors of
society. Public education transfers wealth to families with children in public schools. Public road construction transfers wealth
from people that do not use the roads to those people that do (and to those that build the roads). Certain people resent having
to contribute to some or all of these programs, and disparagingly label them social engineering.
Like all human activities, wealth redistribution cannot achieve 100% efficiency. The act of redistribution itself has certain
costs associated with it, due to the necessary maintenance of the infrastructure that is required to collect the wealth in
question and then redistribute it. Different people on different sides of the political spectrum have different views on this
issue. Some see it as unacceptable waste, while others see it as a natural fact of life, which is inevitable in all kinds of
inter-human relations.
Proponents of the supply-side theory of "trickle-down" economics claim that it
is a form of time-deferred philanthropy. The theory is that newly created wealth eventually "trickles down" to all strata of
society. The argument goes that although wealth is created primarily by the wealthy, they will tend to reinvest their wealth, and
this process will create even more wealth. As the economy grows, it is said that more and more people will share in the newly
created wealth. A similar argument can be made in the case of Keynesian economics.
According to this theory, government redistributions and expenditures have a multiplier
effect that stimulates the economy and creates wealth. Supply-siders claim that wealth is created primarily by investment
(supply), whereas Keynesians claim that wealth is driven by expenditure (demand). Today most economists agree that growth can be
stimulated by either the supply or demand side, and some of them argue that these are really two sides of the same coin, in the
sense that you seldom get one without the other. Nevertheless, the dispute between supply-side and Keynesian economics is of
continuing interest.
Stresses within social distribution systems can be understood within a broad theory of political economy, where tradeoffs between means of
protection, persuasion and production, and valuations of different styles of
capital, are described. Simply put, if the rich do not at least once in a while give away, of their own free will, at
least a small part of their wealth to the poor, then the poor are much more likely to rebel against the rich.
Wealth in the form of land
Many indigenous cultures reject the notion of land wealth. In western tradition, the concepts of owning land and accumulating
wealth in the form of land, are derived from Biblical tradition, where God told the Israelites to go in and take possession of
the promised land of Caanan.
Land ownership was also justified according to John Locke. He claimed that because we
admix our labour with the land, we thereby deserve the right to control the use of the land and benefit from the product of that
land, subject to the Lockean proviso of "at least where there is enough, and as good
left in common for others." Additionally, in our post agricultural society this argument has many critics (including those
influenced by Georgist and geolibertarian ideas)
that argue that since people did not create land, they have no right of property over it. Still, many older ideas have resurfaced
in the modern notions of ecological stewardship, bioregionalism, natural capital, and ecological economics.
See also
References
bpy:রিকুয়েজা
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