I have a few thoughts. I want to share them. It is as simple as that. Perhaps my thoughts will make a difference, make others think, make them re-think, make them re-discover some basic truths. Perhaps not. But the catharsis of putting words to my thoughts and sending them out "there" for someone to read will be worth it. So here goes.
This blog is dedicated to a simple principle, but a principle with far-reaching consequences. That principle is this: Wealth is the product of individual work, invention, investment and trade. Through each of these, wealth--and we will define what that means later on--is
created, meaning something that wasn't there before is there now. The creation of wealth is nothing less than amazing, an under-appreciated miracle of human effort and ingenuity, which occurs millions and millions of times each day, all over the world. In its most robust form, wealth-creation lifts entire populations out of poverty, spawns innovation and invention, produces abundant necessities--food, shelter, medicine--and allows humans to enjoy the most fantastic form of wealth there is: leisure. Wealth-creation should be the highest goal of any civil government, for it maximizes liberty and prosperity.
What do I mean by "wealth"? I don't mean money. Money is just a representation of wealth, a medium of exchange, though which things with true value, which reflect true wealth, are traded. You can't do anything with money
as it is (well, except maybe burn it, but that would hardly be putting it to good use). All you can do with it is buy things, and those are the things that have true value.
So wealth isn't money, but it isn't pure material goods, either. Wealth is also found in the value of services you can hire to perform tasks you can't do or don't want to do, or can't do as well or as efficiently as someone else.
But wealth is not only the value of goods and services you can buy. For, as pointed out above, the most fantastic form of wealth you can enjoy--leisure--can't be bought, strictly speaking, but can only be obtained as the result of having earned and saved well enough that you have time to do something other than work. This form of wealth is now available to nearly everyone in Western economies, and much of the entire world, in abundance, yet only a few generations ago it could only be claimed by kings and princes.
Thus, wealth is one's subjective wherewithal. It is one's own economic power to earn and spend, to obtain what one needs or desires, or not to earn and spend but to enjoy one's leisure, in the balance one desires. And it is important to realize that wealth is subjective. One who is poor in material goods but satisfied with the little pleasures of life--books, a child's giggle, a sunny breeze through one's hair--may be just as "wealthy," in his own estimation, as someone else who has everything but no time to enjoy it or no one to enjoy it with.
So that's the nature of wealth, and I think economists and political philosophers will back me up. But here's the thing many miss about the nature of wealth, which is what I want this blog to focus on: Unless one is stealing, no one gets wealthier by making someone else less wealthy. Many people believe the exact opposite, but they are exactly wrong. They believe all wealth is fixed; that there is no such thing as "creating" wealth, only moving some fraction of the same quantum of wealth from one person to another; that the pie is always the same size, and for someone to have a bigger slice, someone else has to have a smaller one. But that's just not so. The nature of wealth is in fact the opposite. Indeed, for one person to gain wealth, he almost
has to make others he deals with
wealthier, too. In other words, wealth-creation is not a solo enterprise, at least not when it gets going full steam, but is a community- and nation-wealth-building enterprise. Far from a zero-sum game, in which an addition of wealth here means a subtraction of wealth somewhere else, wealth-creation adds to the sum with every transaction. It entails an exponential expansion of the pie.
Why is this right? Consider: We said wealth is the product of work, invention, investment and trade. Certainly it is easy to imagine how wealth can be created out of work, invention and investment. You make a chair out of wood and sell it for more than the material costs; your work yields the extra wealth created by making the chair. Or you invent a new chair design and sell the design to a furniture manufacturer, who sells thousands of them and pays you a royalty; your invention created the wealth of the new useful item. And investment yields wealth by putting resources into the hands of others who can apply their work and invention, paying you a dividend for taking a chance on them.
But how does trade create wealth? Trade is the source of the real miracle of wealth-creation, but I will save that for my next post.