A website to spend Elon Musk's fortune
spend-elon-fortune.netlify.appThe comments here miss the point. Sure you can’t cash out all your stock at once without serious effects.
There is no need to sell any stock though to access insane wealth. I racked up a bill on that site worth 5% of Elon’s value and went pretty wild. Elon could easily tap into that wealth tomorrow with a loan from a bank backed by collateral from his stock without selling a thing. So he maintains control of his companies, doesn’t pay taxes (as he sold nothing), and can literally buy anything he could ever imagine without having any serious effect on his net worth
People always say this, and I always ask "but then doesn't he have to pay back the loan?" and I never get a good answer.
Presumably the loan period is quite long, and someone has some amount of income, so monthly payments are tiny. You can keep refinancing indefinitely until you die, after which your descendants can do a one-time liquidation (paying no cap gains tax) to pay off the balance.
You never have to pay back the loan yourself. Just make small monthly payments and refinance until death. This is actually a pretty widely-exploited part of our tax system, for very high net worth people.
What prevents you from taking a loan out on your shares, buying more shares, then taking a loan of the same amount out on the shares you just bought, and do it again, and repeat it forever?
> I racked up a bill on that site worth 5% of Elon’s value and went pretty wild.
Great! Now how do we pick which lucky 20 people get to spend the wealth?
This kind of stuff is silly and damaging propaganda. It distracts people from what being a billionaire means.
If Elon cashed out his stock he would no longer have control of SpaceX and Tesla. Those are literally what he is doing with his money.
Agreed. It doesn't mean buying things, it means exercising disproportionate influence and solidifying a dangerous concentration of power. But the ability to secure countless of dollars in government subsidies - over and over again at every level of government - is pretty hard to illustrate. Let's hope this person's next project does a better job at capturing what being a billionaire means.
What disproportionate influence or dangerous concentration of power does Elon represent other than the power he has to motivate his employees to build rockets and cars?
I guess all I can do is grant you the fact that political science has had a difficult time proving the impact of money on policy in representative democracies.
But I also know it is not an accident that someone as wealthy as Elon Musk paid no federal income taxes in 2018 and pays very little in many years. As wealthy people concentrate more power, they bend the system to their favor - distorting both social systems and the markets.
> wealthy as Elon Musk paid no federal income taxes in 2018 and pays very little in many years.
What has this to do with anything? He doesn’t live off a salary, so of course he doesn’t pay income tax.
Exactly. This is how the system works. It is not an accident that someone can accumulate wealth and find ways not evade taxation through measures not available to other people in society. Even if you consider Musk's "effective tax rate," it's a pittance.
Every single metric shows that the wealthy are increasingly effective at concentrating their wealth. This has been the trend in the United States since the mid-20th century. It's undeniable that they are deliberately and effectively doing this. The only question is whether or not this concentration of wealth is good for society or bad for society. Due to the complexity of societies, this is difficult to demonstrate empirically. I grant you this.
If you think that these conditions haven't generally lead to the formation of strong kleptocracies throughout history... well I guess we'll simply disagree.
> Exactly. This is how the system works
Ok but now you’re agreeing with me. This has nothing to do with Elon musk exerting undue influence or doing anything nefarious with his power.
The system has worked effectively to enable someone who is capable of it to organize people to build spacecraft and electric cars.
> If you think that these conditions haven't generally lead to the formation of strong kleptocracies throughout history...
You keep ‘granting me’ that there is no evidence that there is anything bad about what he is doing, but then introducing new innuendo to that effect.
There is no innuendo. I explicitly stated the lowest hanging fruit - he barely pays taxes - as a simple example of how wealthy people use their influence to distort social systems. If you don't think that his effective tax rate hovers around 5% is a problem - well that's fine. I don't really want to debate the qualitative impact of vast concentrations of wealth on social systems and markets.
Quantitatively speaking, we can see that people in Musk's category of wealth have been increasingly effective at consolidating their wealth over the last 60 years. At least within North America and Western Europe. It looks like a deliberate effort to accumulate power - but it seems that you see this differently.
This concentration of wealth is certainly not necessary to launch a car brand. It has happened too many times over the 20th century to be true.
> he barely pays taxes - as a simple example of how wealthy people use their influence to distort social systems
That’s an innuendo right there.
Even if you are right that there are wealthy people (which ones?) Who have ‘distorted’ social systems (‘distorted’ from what ideal?), it’s innuendo to imply that Musk is somehow doing this, unless you have some specific evidence about his actions.
The tax system may or may not be wrong in some way which we can discuss, but that isn’t about Musk and his businesses.
Casting ‘billionaires’ as a group as all somehow bad in this way is a meaningless way to think about this. Frankly this is just political disinformation aimed at creating animus towards people rather than solutions.
A parallel would be a statement like “Activists lies harm our political discourse and increase polarization”. Equally just innuendo, and equally meaningless although superficially ‘truthy’ looking.
You are willfully ignoring my quantitative statement and logical conclusion.
> people in Musk's category of wealth have been increasingly effective at consolidating their wealth over the last 60 years
This is an empirically observable fact.
> His effective tax rate hovers around 5%
This is a quantitative statement.
I combine these two facts with a theorem - these realities do not emerge by accident. They are the byproduct of an intentional effort.
Therefore:
> It is not an accident that someone can accumulate wealth and find ways not evade taxation through measures not available to other people in society.
No innuendo. Also - I explicitly refuse to inject innuendo into the argument, admitting that the "goodness" or "badness" of this sort of manipulation is difficult to prove. I think his 5% tax rate is a problem. You do not. Fine. But before we can even talk about solutions, we need to accept a baseline of reality.
> I can do is grant you the fact that political science has had a difficult time proving the impact of money on policy in representative democracies.
Perhaps because it’s not as strong an effect as people would like to believe.
Wouldn’t you say political activists have a disproportionate influence on our democracies too? Why is that ok and the influence of billionaires not?
Agreed. We should all take being a billionaire more seriously.
That's not true. He can sell at least half if not more while retaining voting control.
That’s not true - he has outside investors already.
Clicking "Buy" on the private island as fast as I can and not moving the needle really illustrates how big that number is..
Of course he couldn't dump all his stock at it's current share price, the sudden arrival of that many shares would drive the price down -- but these things aren't really about facts and more about driving an agenda
Chuckling with glee and buying all of NBA.
Cries when remembers that it's not my money.
If I were Elon Musk I'd spend all my money on setting up a Mars colony.
Is it just me?
Well that's exactly why he's accumulating wealth. It'll all get dumped into that once Tesla is stable.
O:-)
He can't even afford to buy the NBA and NFL. What a loser.