https://archive.is/2025.02.28-235115/https://www.economist.com/leaders/2025/02/27/inheriting-is-becoming-nearly-as-important-as-working

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Inheriting is becoming nearly as important as working

More wealth means more money for baby-boomers to pass on. That is dangerous for capitalism and society

Feb 27th 2025

Work hard, children are told, and you will succeed. In recent decades this advice served the talented and the diligent well. Many have made their own fortunes and live comfortably, regardless of how much money they inherited. Now, however, the importance of hereditary wealth is rising around the rich world, and that is a problem.

People in advanced economies stand to inherit around $6trn this year—about 10% of GDP, up from around 5% on average in a selection of rich countries during the middle of the 20th century. As a share of output, annual inheritance flows have doubled in France since the 1960s, and nearly trebled in Germany since the 1970s. Whether a young person can afford to buy a house and live in relative comfort is determined by inherited wealth nearly as much as it is by their own success at work. This shift has alarming economic and social consequences, because it imperils not just the meritocratic ideal, but capitalism itself.

In part, the inheritance boom is a reflection of a wealthier and ageing society. As economies have become richer, they have accumulated capital per worker—capital that someone has to own. But because the pace of economic growth has slackened and housing markets have boomed, the scale of this wealth relative to incomes has ballooned. Nowhere is this combination of towering wealth and enduring sclerosis more evident than in Europe, where productivity growth has been dismal.

More wealth means more inheritance for baby-boomers to pass on. And because wealth is far more unequally distributed than income, a new inheritocracy is being born.

You can see this in the shifting fortunes of the super-rich. For much of the 20th century vast estates were often broken up by bad investing, or by war and inflation. By one calculation, if America’s rich families in 1900 had invested passively in the stockmarket, spent 2% of their wealth each year and had the usual number of children, there would be about 16,000 old-money billionaires in America today. In fact, there are fewer than 1,000 billionaires and the vast majority of them are self-made.

These trends are being overturned, however, perhaps because billionaires are both amassing wealth and are better at preserving their riches. In 2023, 53 people became billionaires thanks to inheritance, not far short of the 84 who made their own fortunes, according to UBS, a bank. That may be because it is now easy to park wealth in an index fund, and the principles of wealth management are better understood. Moreover, many governments have obligingly cut inheritance taxes.

The most striking thing about the inheritocracy, though, is that it is not just about the uber-rich. The typical heir is someone inheriting a normal house, or the proceeds from its sale, not a superyacht or a country pile. And housing wealth has rocketed in recent decades, especially in apex cities like London, New York and Paris. Those who were fortunate enough to buy property before the long boom have made lots of money, passing on a windfall to their heirs. As a consequence, bankers and corporate lawyers now fight bidding wars over houses from the estates of deceased taxi drivers. As housing has become ever more unaffordable in places like New York and London, so a 90th-percentile income has become too small to pay for a 90th-percentile life. You must have significant capital, too—if not from your parents’ estate, then from the Bank of Mum and Dad.

If you consider this as a whole, the growing importance of inheritance starts to become clear. In Britain one in six of those born in the 1960s is projected to receive an inheritance that exceeds ten years of average annual earnings for that generation. For those born in the 1980s, the ratio rises to one in three. The inequality of what people inherit, meanwhile, is startling. A fifth of 35- to 45-year-olds are expected to inherit less than £10,000 ($13,000), whereas a quarter are expected to inherit more than £280,000.

For supporters of free markets, the rise of the new inheritocracy should be deeply disturbing. For a start, it creates a rentier class that faces a series of bad incentives. A loophole-ridden tax system means that the wealthy spend a lot of time gaming the rules; it would be better used to direct their capital to more productive uses instead. To protect their assets, homeowners become nimbys, blocking building and making housing unaffordable for those without inherited wealth. Knowing they can rely on their inheritance, moreover, the new rentiers may face little incentive to work or innovate.

More worrying still is how a underclass of non-beneficiaries is becoming increasingly left behind—and increasingly disaffected. If property becomes ever harder to buy, and a comfortable life harder to achieve, the incentive of young, aspirational workers to strive will be blunted. And when they believe that the system is stacked against them, their support for mainstream political parties withers.

Family fortunes

That is why fixing the problem is urgent. It would be mad to wish that inflation and war destroy fortunes, as they did in the 20th century. This newspaper has long argued that inheritance taxes are the fairest tool to deal with inheritocracy. Yet the taxes are so unpopular that, instead of enforcing them, governments have introduced loophole after loophole, raised the threshold at which they apply, or dismantled them altogether.

Fortunately, there are other remedies. Building enough houses in the right place is the single biggest action governments can take to restore the link between work and wealth. Levying sufficient annual property taxes, especially those that target underlying land values, would also help, because the tax would be capitalised as a fall in house prices, bringing down house-price-to-income ratios. And anything that boosts economic growth, so desperately needed in Europe, would bring down wealth-to-GDP ratios. The heyday of meritocracy brought with it social mobility, growth and prosperity. With a little hard work, those days can return. ■

  • filister@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    The biggest problem is housing becoming unaffordable, and believe me paying 40-50% of your net income just to put a roof over your head is very depressing. It really makes a big difference in your lifestyle. And mind you it is almost impossible to buy even a modest apartment in big cities on an average salary.

  • madame_gaymes@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    lmao, my parents are dumbfucks who spend all their money on Disney vacations and Harley Davidsons when they don’t even have any retirement accounts and everything is in cash. I have no inheritance coming my way, are you kidding me?

    • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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      7 hours ago

      Why shouldn’t your parents be allowed to spend their money on whatever makes them happy? Don’t blame them for this financial system.

      • madame_gaymes@programming.dev
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        4 hours ago

        Yes, let them be happy supporting Disney, a company founded by a Nazi sympathizer and HD, a company that makes over-priced and 'Murican sized motorcycles with a built-in engineering defect that has become a feature.

        Even with this shit financial system, you can make better choices. My comment still stands, they are dumbfucks. They’ve shown me that have no respect for me and my life, or my sibling and their child’s life. But yea, let them be happy while they piss on nature with their wallets.

  • turnip@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Our system survives by creating economic slaves.  For instance the mortgage acts as a gatekeeper in the fiat system, by locking up an inelastic good in a form that can only be unlocked by completing the payment obligations.  Housing rises in price to max out the metaphorical bucket of whatever interest rates allow for debt accumulation, and property ownership is controlled by one’s ability to secure debt. This ensures that the financial system has a steady stream of obligations that help sustain the flow of currency, which helps drive aggregate demand.

    The goal is to create a 2% inflation, as calculated by an index that excludes housing appreciation and investments, you require ever growing money supply.  Money supply is grown via debt accumulation, this then funnels down into foods and services, excluding substitutions and hedonic adjustments, deriving a 2% inflation to a dynamic basket of goods. Housing works well for this because housing is finite and demand in inelastic; prices can rise faster than fundamentals, and it is therefore a liquidity sponge.

    We need a liquidity sponge because for every person who saves money someone else must have a corresponding debt. Since the gold standard ended debt now has to grow, to create the new money supply to pay past debts.  The money you spend at the grocery store is somebody else’s debt, its somebody’s mortgage or bank loan, that you acquired by working a job to produce something that the newly issued currency desired.

    If the next guy doesn’t take out debt, say because prices are falling, then the entire scheme unwinds, and we get a crisis. That money owed has already been spent several times, until it ends up in an equity, unmortgaged home, or bond, and outside of what the CPI uses to hold back money supply growth. If debt isnt taken out then rates will keep falling until someone is encouraged to borrow, in which case debt is securitized into a new supply of money, which creates the windfall that can be spent on consumer goods to derive a 2% inflation.

    If debt does keep accumulating you can extract the cantillon effect, as long as the next guy in line takes out debt past debts are inflated away and your past debt is paid off.  As people realize this phenomenon they are then willing to sign up for ever larger debts, and you get a bubble in asset prices, because we treat promises of future money the same as present money. So in my opinion its the monetary system that is the main cause of the growing wealth inequality, and the farther we get from the gold standard the worse it will get.

  • driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br
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    1 day ago

    Don’t worry, insurance companies already have a solution to take away that inheritance for you. It’s called reverse mortgage, where the insurance company give monthly payments to your parents, and when they die their house is transferred to the insurance company to be sold to Blackrock or Vanguard.

    • Capt. Wolf@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Yup, my wife’s grandmother got suckered into it. Three story, Victorian era house, located blocks from the beach, easily worth over a million dollars and it’ll go to whatever bank instead of to her family that’s already supporting her financially. Thanks, Tom Selleck…

    • Avid Amoeba
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      1 day ago

      So still inheritance, just consolidated, going to another nepo baby.

  • mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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    1 day ago

    I think for most Americans, they are considering it a win if their parents saved enough to retire and have their affairs in order. Just knowing you won’t have to do some bizarre financial trickery to handle your parents retirement housing and end of life care is a huge relief, to say nothing of having anything left over to inherit when they’re gone.

    • corsicanguppy
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      1 day ago

      Retirement housing can be planned for? Per-month it’s more expensive than a posh high-rise down-town!

      The price can be explained; I’m just saying “retirement housing” is easily beyond what any mortal can pay.

      • mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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        23 hours ago

        Yeah well assisted living with skilled nursing costs a fortune. Luckily most people only need that for 6 months to a year before they die anyway. I’m talking more like “55+ downsized housing” that doesn’t yet require a nurse, memory care, or any of that stuff.

  • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Inheriting is more important than working and has been for some time now.

    I made all of my money by working, but my success is to some extent related to being born to parents that paid for my college provided I made decent grades in high school. (And the luck of having access and interest in the early Internet in the mid 90s due to inheritance.)

    • vin@lemmynsfw.com
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      16 hours ago

      Whereas what you say is true, there is a difference in the kind of inheritance. The kind of inheritance that the article talks about means that doing no productive work is in the optimal approach to getting rich.

  • “Nearly as”???

    Having enough money to get the education NEEDED to work in today’s world (or enough money inherited to get a position based on your financial influence) has A MASSIVE impact on your quality of life.

    Having one of those gets you to an equivalent position to “working your way up the ranks of a company”, except you get there YEARS earlier and with less effort.

    • commander@lemmings.world
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      1 day ago

      You can always educate yourself.

      We have the best library in the history of mankind right at our fingertips, and most college courses are just walking people through books.

      • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Yes, but that’s not what they were saying. Self-educated people might be just as smart as people with a formal education (possibly smarter even), but that does little good if you can’t get a job without the official credentials.

    • errer@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      If you read the article it actually says that billionaires have benefited the most from inheritance, almost as many of them became billionaires by inheriting rather than earning it themselves.