Entrepreneurs, Chance, and the Deterministic Concentration of Wealth
Authored by Joseph E Fargione, Clarence Lehman, Stephen Polasky
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0020728
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Abstract
In many economies, wealth is strikingly concentrated.
Entrepreneurs-individuals with ownership in for-profit
enterprises-comprise a large portion of the wealthiest individuals, and
their behavior may help explain patterns in the national distribution of
wealth. Entrepreneurs are less diversified and more heavily invested in
their own companies than is commonly assumed in economic models. We
present an intentionally simplified individual-based model of wealth
generation among entrepreneurs to assess the role of chance and
determinism in the distribution of wealth. We demonstrate that chance
alone, combined with the deterministic effects of compounding returns, can lead to unlimited concentration of wealth, such that the percentage
of all wealth owned by a few entrepreneurs eventually approaches 100\%.
Specifically, concentration of wealth results when the rate of return on
investment varies by entrepreneur and by time. This result is robust to
inclusion of realities such as differing skill among entrepreneurs. The
most likely overall growth rate of the economy decreases as businesses
become less diverse, suggesting that high concentrations of wealth may
adversely affect a country's economic growth. We show that a tax on
large inherited fortunes, applied to a small portion of the most
fortunate in the population, can efficiently arrest the concentration of
wealth at intermediate levels.
Tags
Inequality
Model
income