Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2024 4:26:33 GMT
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Steve
Hero Protagonist
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Post by Steve on Jul 14, 2024 9:14:20 GMT
Truth is a millionaire isn't as rare or as rich as once was and that article is referring to $ millionaires of which we have over 70,000 and create more all the time. Anyone with a average house and decent pension pot* is likely now a $millionaire. And here is the actual report it's based on and they've used a sus extrapolation of the outflow in the first months: www.henleyglobal.com/publications/henley-private-wealth-migration-report-2024/top-10-country-outflows * enough to give them an inflation indexed total state + private pension equivalent to average UK earnings at age 65
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 16, 2024 18:56:25 GMT
Still not a good sign.
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Post by brownlow on Jul 19, 2024 20:03:18 GMT
Good.
Millionaires are two-a-penny. Ultra-rich people like billionaires are not good for the economy. A 45 year experiment has shown that high levels of inequality are - contrary to previous supposition - associated with slower economic growth.
[Slower growth] + [more inequality] = [most people worse off] as a matter of arithmetic.
Money does not grow on rich people. Rich people cannot legally "make" money, they can only accumulate it. If they use their accumulated money to invest in production, fine, but they generally don't - or less so than when the little guys have more disposable income.
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