lpetrich
Contributor
That would be a byproduct of lending at interest. When a debtor pays off a debt, the creditor gets back not only the money lent in the debt, but also some interest. This means a net loss on the part of the debtor. If this continues long enough, the creditors would end up with all the money and the debtors with none.
Creditors include investors, and Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21th Century has a famous result. For return on investment r and growth rate g, if r > g, then great economic inequality results for the reason that I have described. He notes that a common theme of many 19th cy. novels is an ambitious man marrying a woman from a wealthy family, as if that was the only feasible way to get rich -- his labors alone won't do it.
But what keeps this economic Goetterdaemmerung from happening? There are various things that can do so.
* The creditors going on a spending binge or a giving binge. However, they are usually careful not to sacrifice very much of their money in that fashion, so that is not usually very effective. At least not short of starting a latter-day Potlatch cult.
* The creditors become unable to collect what their debtors owe them. This can happen from the debtors running out of money, by the debtors declaring bankruptcy, the debtors refusing to pay, or by a government cancelling the debt (the Bible's Jubilee years, for instance).
* Governments printing money. This risks the opposite calamity: inflation.
* Abolishing money. That strikes me as economic crackpottery, though I have seen some people advocate it.
* Redistributive taxation, from creditors to debtors. That does work, but it makes the creditors resentful of having to support those that they consider losers and failures. This sometimes gets turned into redistribution in the opposite direction, by the upper classes getting the politicians to exempt them from taxation.
Creditors include investors, and Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21th Century has a famous result. For return on investment r and growth rate g, if r > g, then great economic inequality results for the reason that I have described. He notes that a common theme of many 19th cy. novels is an ambitious man marrying a woman from a wealthy family, as if that was the only feasible way to get rich -- his labors alone won't do it.
But what keeps this economic Goetterdaemmerung from happening? There are various things that can do so.
* The creditors going on a spending binge or a giving binge. However, they are usually careful not to sacrifice very much of their money in that fashion, so that is not usually very effective. At least not short of starting a latter-day Potlatch cult.
* The creditors become unable to collect what their debtors owe them. This can happen from the debtors running out of money, by the debtors declaring bankruptcy, the debtors refusing to pay, or by a government cancelling the debt (the Bible's Jubilee years, for instance).
* Governments printing money. This risks the opposite calamity: inflation.
* Abolishing money. That strikes me as economic crackpottery, though I have seen some people advocate it.
* Redistributive taxation, from creditors to debtors. That does work, but it makes the creditors resentful of having to support those that they consider losers and failures. This sometimes gets turned into redistribution in the opposite direction, by the upper classes getting the politicians to exempt them from taxation.