The politics of envy: why the rich are resented | thearticle

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The politics of envy: why the rich are resented | thearticle"


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Envy has always existed and it transcends cultural boundaries. The renowned sociologist Helmut Schoeck showed this as early as 1968 in his book _Envy: A Theory of Social Behaviour_. However,


in capitalist societies, envy seems to manifest itself more intensely than in previous eras. In capitalist societies, social standing is not determined by lineage or birthright, for, before


the law, everyone is equal. In reality, though, competition does not lead to equality, but to inequality. And people can react quite differently to this inequality: some respond by striving


to reduce the gap between themselves and the rich by trying to improve their own situation. Such people see the rich as a source of inspiration. They seek to learn from successful figures


such as Jeff Bezos or Elon Musk by buying a biography or two and studying them to see what insights they can glean. Others react with envy — like the protesters who set up a guillotine in


front of Jeff Bezos’ $23 million mansion in Washington D.C. Envy is often fomented by political forces, who incite this emotion for their own political gain. Throughout history, there have


been countless examples of this phenomenon. The brutal dictator Idi Amin, who ruled Uganda in the 1970s, hated Jews and “rich” Asians. He said: “Germany is the right place where when Hitler


was the Prime Minister and supreme commander, he burned over six million Jews. This is because Hitler and all German people knew that Israelis are not people who are working in the interest


of the people of the world and that is why they burned the Israelis alive with gas in the soil of Germany.” Idi Amin suggested resettling all Israelis from the Middle East to Great Britain.


Following his persecution of the Jewish population, Idi Amin turned his hatred towards Asians, particularly Indians. In early August 1972, Amin issued a decree for the expulsion of all


Asians from Uganda. At that time, there were around 80,000 Asians living in Uganda, mainly from India and Pakistan. They had already been targeted by Amin’s socialist predecessor Milton


Obote, whose persecution of the Asian population had damaged the country’s economy. As so often in history, the rich and successful had become scapegoats and an unprecedented campaign of


social envy was launched. The Ugandan Asians were labelled as exploiters whose only objective was self-enrichment at the expense of indigenous people. They were accused of hoarding wealth.


They were accused of milking the economy. Everything that went wrong in the economy was blamed on them. Africans, so the reasoning went, were poor because Indians were exploiting them. The


economy was not growing because of the Indians. The persecution of Asians in Uganda was widely supported by the population as a whole. Before they were expelled, Asians owned many large


businesses in Uganda, but the “cleansing” of Asians from Uganda’s economy was virtually complete. A total of 5,655 companies, plus ranches, farms, agricultural land, houses, and cars were


seized from Asians and redistributed to Africans. Just six months later, in January 1973, Idi Amin made the decision to expropriate British-owned companies without providing compensation.


These socialist measures plunged Uganda into a deep crisis. The expulsion of the Asians aggravated the country’s woes, as it destroyed a significant portion of the urban tax base. At the


time of their deportation, Asians owned 90 percent of the country’s businesses and accounted for 90 percent of Uganda’s tax revenue. Envy is a universal phenomenon that exists everywhere in


the world, although it does vary in intensity from country to country. I commissioned Ipsos MORI to conduct a survey to gain a deeper understanding of attitudes towards the wealthy in


different countries. We asked respondents in 13 countries the same questions. In each country, we categorised respondents into three distinct groups: social enviers, non-enviers, and


ambivalents, who fall somewhere in between. By dividing the percentage of enviers by the percentage of non-enviers in a given country, we arrive at the social envy coefficient (SEC). The


result: envy of the rich is most pronounced in France, followed by Germany. Envy is much weaker in Japan and Poland. THE SOCIAL ENVY COEFFICIENT IN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON  I presented the


detailed results of the study in four articles for the British journal _Economic Affairs_, and summarised them in the article “Popular perceptions of the rich in 13 countries,” which was


published in May 2024. The Chinese economist Weiying Zhang also deals with envy in his new book: _Re-Understanding Entrepreneurship. What It Is and Why it Matters_, which was published by


the renowned Cambridge University Press in May 2024. Zhang also attributes social envy to the fact that most people do not understand how entrepreneurs earn money and believe that the


wealthy only become rich by exploiting others: “Yet, the average person does not understand how an entrepreneur can make money. Entrepreneurs do not work in the field like farmers or sweat


like workers, so why are they rich? In particular, businessmen engaged in trade do not even change any material form of the product, so how can they make money? It seems, as they did it _ex


nihilo_! The answer is that they buy low and sell high, deceiving both the seller and the buyer.” As in my books _The Wealth Elite_ https://the-wealth-elite.com/ and _The Rich in Public


Opinion_ https://therichinpublicopinion.com/, which Zhang also refers to, he argues that intellectuals in particular place academic knowledge above all other forms of knowledge and


completely fail to understand the key role of “tacit knowledge” in entrepreneurial success. However, envy stems from the zero-sum belief: “If we believe that wealth is a fixed quantity


(zero-sum game) instead of a quantity that can be created (positive-sum game), it is easy to see other people’s fortunes as the reason for one’s own poverty. It is easy to become green with


envy, keen to engage in class struggle. If we believe that labour involves sweat, thus we do not consider the use of entrepreneurship to be a special form of labour, then we will have


difficulty understanding why entrepreneurs make money.” This zero-sum belief was perhaps most concisely expressed in the poem “Alfabet” by the famous communist poet Bertolt Brecht: “Said the


poor man with a twitch: Were I not poor, you wouldn’t be rich.” And yet, the zero-sum belief is easy to refute: the number of people living in poverty worldwide has been falling sharply for


decades, while the number of billionaires has been rising sharply. If the rich could only become rich at the expense of the poor, how can the poor be less poor today than they were 40 years


ago, when over 40 percent of the global population was living in extreme poverty (today that number has decreased to 8.5 percent)? In the final years of the Mao era, 88 percent of the


Chinese population were living in extreme poverty. Then the reformer Deng Xiaoping said: “Let some people get rich first.” He introduced private property and ushered in a new era of market


economy reforms. Today, China boasts more billionaires than any other nation in the world (with the exception of the USA) and the proportion of people living in extreme poverty has plummeted


below one percent. The driving force behind both the increase in the number of rich people and the decrease in poverty is the same: economic growth. As Adam Smith explained in his book _The


Wealth of Nations _here, the only way for nations to escape poverty is through economic growth, and the prerequisite for economic growth is economic freedom. RAINER ZITELMANN IS THE AUTHOR


OF THE BOOKS _THE POWER OF CAPITALISM HTTPS://THE-POWER-OF-CAPITALISM.COM/; IN DEFENSE OF CAPITALISM HTTPS://IN-DEFENSE-OF-CAPITALISM.COM/; _AND _HOW NATIONS ESCAPE POVERTY


HTTPS://NATIONS-ESCAPE-POVERTY.COM/_ A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s


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