this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2022
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United States | News & Politics
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Oh I see, I would imagine they're not since the top .1% aren't making money from wage labour. These people make profit from their capital. They're the actual capitalists in the country.
But the USA's expert pay is also completely disproportionate. Meaning the 1%/.1% of wage earners earn very high wages that doesn't exist in the same sphere as the average person's wage.
The gulf between high paid wage labourers and the truly rich is astronomical. A highly paid professional is far closer to a homeless person in terms of wealth than to the 0.1% that owns the country. Here's a good breakdown https://economics.princeton.edu/working-papers/top-wealth-in-america-new-estimates-and-implications-for-taxing-the-rich/
Yes I understand, but the difference between a 15K/yr wage (USA mode wage) and a 300M/yr wage (Highest wage I found quickly, Sundar Pichai) is still big enough to impact statistics.
Sure, but in the end we end up looking at the median wage, and that's going down when considered in the context of purchasing power.