- Apollo program: 4%
- Railroads: 6% (mentioned by the author)
- Covid stimulus: 27%
- WW2 defense: 40%
- Apollo program: 4%
- Railroads: 6% (mentioned by the author)
- Covid stimulus: 27%
- WW2 defense: 40%
Slightly off-topic, but ~9% of GDP is generated by "financial services" in the US. Personally I think it's a more alarming data point.
Or your retirement account. Everyone is mad about investors and companies making money. Sure, there are ultra wealthy people (mostly founders) that benefit disproportionately. However, most people who hope to retire some day rely on a 401k, pension, etc which is dependent on stocks. Retirement accounts have about $36T in the US, mostly in equities and corporate bonds.
The richest 1% own half the wealth in the world and the gap is getting wider. Since 2020, for every dollar of new global wealth gained by someone in the bottom 90%, one of the world’s billionaires has gained $1.7 million. (Source: https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/wealth-inequality-o...)
So yes, some of the wealth is going to your retirement account. But for every penny going to a middle-class professional workers retirement, there's about a thousand dollars going to some hedge fund manager or the trust fund of the grandson of some robber baron who got rich a hundred years ago.
Generational inheritance is a cancer, and many American ills are a direct result of allowing it to fester unsolved.
Buffett was right — enough to get a good start, but no more.