Cheerful Charlie
Contributor
Thought experiment. Everyone has the ability to own their own business and decides to try to save money to open one up. Would our economic system actually allow everyone to own their own business, individual or as a co-op? I guess many people could buy clothes or shoes to retail or mow some yards but I do not see how everyone could start a company and get it big to where they get rich.
What would happen if everyone who has to work for a living by working for someone else actually did start saving all their money to start their own businesses, and I mean a business big enough to have income coming in enough to live on, not supplemental money. If people were disiciplined enough to save every penny they did not absolutely need to spend they would cut their own throats economically. They would most likely end up losing their jobs because the extra money from others wasn't circulating (everyone saving so no money coming in where they work or not as much) and their savings would have to be used to take care of themselves until they found work.
Banks--even if people saved and somehow managed not to lose their jobs with everyone around them saving every last penny the banks could not loan everyone enough money to go out and start their business.
Capitalism may work extremely well for a few and not to many for many but it seems for it to succeed it has to have most people not want to be in the higher income ranges and/or not be capitalists.
We have the phenomena of Walmart moving into an area and killing the local merchants, and local entrepreneurs. In return, that area gets minimum wage jobs.