Paul Krugman. Jan. 1, 2016.
Wealth
can be bad for your soul. That’s not just a hoary piece of folk wisdom; it’s a
conclusion from serious social science, confirmed by
statistical analysis and experiment. The affluent are, on average, less likely
to exhibit empathy, less likely to respect norms and even laws, more likely to
cheat, than those occupying lower rungs on the economic ladder.
And it’s
obvious, even if we don’t have statistical confirmation, that extreme wealth
can do extreme spiritual damage. Take someone whose personality might have been
merely disagreeable under normal circumstances, and give him the kind of wealth
that lets him surround himself with sycophants and usually get whatever he
wants. It’s not hard to see how he could become almost pathologically
self-regarding and unconcerned with others.
So what
happens to a nation that gives ever-growing political power to the superrich?
Modern America is a society in which a growing share of income
and wealth is concentrated in the hands of a small number of people, and these
people have huge political influence — in the early stages of the 2016 presidential
campaign, around half the contributions came from fewer than
200 wealthy families. The usual concern about this march toward oligarchy is
that the interests and policy preferences of the very rich are quite different
from those of the population at large, and that is surely the biggest problem.
But it’s
also true that those empowered by money-driven politics include a
disproportionate number of spoiled egomaniacs. Which brings me to the current
election cycle.
The most
obvious illustration of the point I’ve been making is the man now leading the
Republican field. Donald Trump would probably have been a blowhard and a bully
whatever his social station. But his billions have insulated him from the
external checks that limit most people’s ability to act out their narcissistic
tendencies; nobody has ever been in a position to tell him, “You’re fired!” And
the result is the face you keep seeing on your TV.
But Mr.
Trump isn’t the only awesomely self-centered billionaire playing an outsized
role in the 2016 campaign.
There
have been some interesting news reports lately about Sheldon Adelson, the Las
Vegas gambling magnate. Mr. Adelson has been involved in some fairly complex
court proceedings, which revolve around claims of misconduct in his operations
in Macau, including links to organized crime and prostitution. Given his
business, this may not be all that surprising. What was surprising was his behavior in court, where he refused to answer
routine questions and argued with the judge, Elizabeth Gonzales. That, as she
rightly pointed out, isn’t something witnesses get to do.
Then Mr.
Adelson bought Nevada’s largest newspaper. As the sale was being finalized,
reporters at the paper were told to drop everything and start monitoring all
activity of three judges, including Ms. Gonzales. And while the paper never
published any results from that investigation, an attack on Judge Gonzales,
with what looks like a fictitious byline, did appear in a small Connecticut
newspaper owned by one of Mr. Adelson’s associates.
O.K.,
but why do we care? Because Mr. Adelson’s political spending has made him a
huge player in Republican politics — so much so that reporters routinely talk
about the “Adelson primary,” in which candidates trek to
Las Vegas to pay obeisance.
You
do not have to be a billionaire to suffer from the rich man syndrome.
Are
there other cases? Yes indeed, even if the egomania doesn’t rise to Adelson
levels. I find myself thinking, for example, of the hedge-fund billionaire Paul
Singer, another big power in the G.O.P., who published an investor’s letter declaring that inflation was running rampant —
he could tell from the prices of Hamptons real estate and high-end art.
Economists got some laughs out of the incident, but think of the
self-absorption required to write something like that without realizing how it
would sound to non-billionaires.708
COMMENTS
Or think
of the various billionaires who, a few years ago,
were declaring with straight faces, and no sign of self-awareness, that
President Obama was holding back the economy by suggesting that some
businesspeople had misbehaved. You see, he was hurting their feelings.
Just to
be clear, the biggest reason to oppose the power of money in politics is the
way it lets the wealthy rig the system and distort policy priorities. And the
biggest reason billionaires hate Mr. Obama is what he did to their taxes, not their
feelings. The fact that some of those buying influence are also horrible people
is secondary.
But it’s
not trivial. Oligarchy, rule by the few, also tends to become rule by the
monstrously self-centered. Narcisstocracy? Jerkigarchy? Anyway, it’s an ugly
spectacle, and it’s probably going to get even uglier over the course of the
year ahead.
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