Weekend reading: That’s rich coming from them

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What caught my eye this week. You don’t need to commission a full-on report to know that we all have wildly different ideas about money – and about how much of it is, well, a lot. And you don’t need to be a dedicated peruser of the personal finance Internet to know the rule is […] The post Weekend reading: That’s rich coming from them appeared first on Monevator.

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What caught my eye this week.

You don’t need to commission a full-on report to know that we all have wildly different ideas about money – and about how much of it is, well, a lot.

And you don’t need to be a dedicated peruser of the personal finance Internet to know the rule is that the more money you have, the higher you set your number 11 on the That’s A Lot Of Money dial, either.

Just witness the regular handbags swinging on Reddit – quite possibly over the price of a handbag – or even the more respectful differences of opinion that follow some of our FIRE-side chats.

One person’s obliviously rich princeling is another’s squeezed middle striver.

But my job isn’t just to ponder the nature of these eternal tugs-of-war.

No, I’m here to introduce the latest one…

This time it comes courtesy of HSBC, whose new Wealth Report was covered this week by This Is Money:

Nine in 10 Britons earning £100,000 or more a year before deductions do not view themselves as wealthy, despite being in the top 4% of earners, new data claims.

On average, most Britons think an individual needs to rake in £213,000 a year before they can be considered wealthy, according to HSBC Premier’s new research.

At over £200,000, the sum most people view as the wealth threshold is over six times the national average annual salary.

Read the rest of the article to spot all your favourite features of the genre!

There’s the map of Great Britain showing how out of touch London is. The claim that Gen Z cares more about buzz than bonuses. And the must-have interview with an obviously rich person who splits her time between the UK and the US but who’s unfortunately benchmarking herself against peers earning millions, and so she feels a little brassic.

Tax twister

Okay, we all understand this.

Money is relative. Taxes eat very nearly half of seemingly vast salaries. A two-bed flat in Zone Two costs £1 million. And won’t anybody think of the school fees?

A more novel twist comes though when you pair this discussion with new research about high-earners’ attitude to taxes. Or how “we all deserve to be rich”, as Joachim Klement put it on his blog this week.

Again it’s no surprise to read how the research found that people who believe their good fortune is down to their skill or effort will then favour lower taxes on the proceeds.

I’ve thought that at times myself, and most of you will have too.

But as Klement explains, researchers at the University of Warwick also showed that even people who derive their winnings entirely from luck will call for lower taxes, compared to those who won nothing.

You can see this effect in the following chart, although it’ll possibly only make sense if you read the full article:

The bottom line is people who have a lot of money don’t want it taken off them, while those who don’t have the money think more of it should be.

Again, hardly rocket science. But I suppose there are only so many well-paid jobs for rocket scientists?

Keeping up with the Jones’ parents

Now I’m not sharing these thoughts because I think £100,000 a year is a vast fortune. Nor am I calling for another round of tax hikes.

If anything I believe that after many years of real terms wage stagnation, the UK has a poverty of ambition about what constitutes a very high salary – certainly versus our US peers.

And as for taxes, the national take approaching a post-war high seems like a pretty good place to say enough is enough, and that perhaps we need to draw a line in the sand and to try something different from here.

However it does all serve as yet another reminder as to how and why it’s so hard to talk to each other about all this. Let alone to reach a political consensus.

Entrenching wealth inequality will only make it worse.

I’ve been warning for years of the increasing risk of what I call ‘neo-feudalism’. It’s one reason why I favour high inheritance taxes.

Meanwhile an article in The Standard this week argues that London has become an ‘inheritocracy’.

The author concludes:

The major frustration in all this is that our 21st-century inheritocracy contradicts everything we were told: work hard, get good grades, land a solid job, and success will follow.

But that promise has crumbled.

Wages don’t keep up, work doesn’t pay, and in London, opportunity is inherited, not earned.

Leaving the city feels like failure, but the real failure is a system where talent loses out to wealth and good fortune.

Have a great weekend.

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News

Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view click through to read the article. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing to sites you visit a lot.

Complaints about leasehold homes rise by 67% – Which

The UK’s net zero push is driving growth, finds CBI report – Morningstar

LSE boss says UK needs to change ‘perverse’ view on retail investment – CityAM

UK house prices rise more than expected in February… – Reuters

…as price gap between houses and flats hits 30-year high – This Is Money

National Grid sells US renewables to Brookfield for $1.7bn – Bloomberg via F.P.

A billion Indians have no spending money – BBC

The true streaming battle is between YouTube and Netflix – Sherwood

Products and services

New TIPS ETF solves inflation hedging. Gilt version to follow? – FT

Energy price cap increases by 6.4% in April – Be Clever With Your Cash

How furniture flippers turn trash into treasure – Guardian

Get up to £1,500 cashback when you transfer your cash and/or investments through this link. Terms apply – Charles Stanley

Cash ISA providers fail to support new flexible rules – Guardian

How to get a free will in March – Which

VCTs have little reason to celebrate turning 30 [Search result]FT

Open an account with low-cost platform InvestEngine via our link and get up to £100 when you invest at least £100 (T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine

Few will qualify for HSBC’s new 3.98% fixed-rate mortgage – This Is Money

Brutalist and modernist homes for sale, in pictures – Guardian

Comment and opinion

Wow, have you seen the stock market lately? – Mr Money Mustache

Buy-to-let: RIP – Fire V London

How should your asset allocation change with age? – Of Dollars and Data

It’s five years since Covid came out of the left field – Humble Dollar

Swedroe: all risk assets experience long periods of poor performance – W.M.

“I’m 68 and I just spent £189,000 on an annuity”This Is Money

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund should be open to everyone – FT

Trust in a black hat world [On U.S. deregulation but relevant]Dave Nadig

A money psychologist on how rich people can feel wealthier – This Is Money

Micro-retirements: Gen Z’s brilliant fix for burnout – Guardian

Investing like an endowment mini-special

Can we all invest like Yale? [PDF]Cambria

…maybe, but the high fees on alts mean we shouldn’t [Research]SSRN

Naughty corner: Active antics

The inevitable capital cycle – Flyover Stocks

Probabilities and payoffs [Research, PDF]Morgan Stanley

Warren Buffett’s annual letter to shareholders… – Berkshire Hathaway

…and how Berkshire might change after Buffett – Rational Walk

The 15 most value-destroying stocks of the past decade – Morningstar

Kindle book bargains

Poor Charlie’s Almanack by Charlie Munger – £0.99 on Kindle

How to Run Britain by Robert Peston and Kishan Koria – £0.99 on Kindle

Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez – £0.99 on Kindle

Chip War by Chris Miller – £1.99 on Kindle

Environmental factors

A climate solution on the half shell – Noema

One tiny island is redefining travel to Thailand – BBC

Battery storage: a quiet revolution in energy industry [Search result]FT

The elegant math model that could help rescue coral reefs – Quanta

Total collapse of Atlantic currents unlikely this century, FWIW – Guardian

Robot overlord roundup

Y Combinator deletes posts after A.I. startup’s demo goes viral – TechCrunch

Amazon’s souped-up Alexa+ arrives next month – Wired

The new aesthetics of Slop – The Honest Broker

Not at the dinner table

This has never happened with an American president before – New York Times

Tories discover that Britain is located in Europe [Search result]FT

The case for DOGE… – We’re Gonna Get Those Bastards

…and the case against – Culture Study

How to buy your way out of a Federal lawsuit – Popular Information

Consumers shun companies whose bosses kowtow to Trump – Guardian

Off our beat

Rare frescoes unearthed in Pompeii shed light on ancient rituals – Reuters

What we learned from ‘that dress’, ten years on – Slate

There’s a small chance asteroid YR4 might hit Earth in 2032 – The Conversation

Seeing foreign languages: how synaesthesia can help language learning – BBC

How many episodes should you watch before quitting a TV show? – Stat Significant

The Murdochs x SuccessionSatPost

What’s it all about? – Humble Dollar

And finally…

“A capitalist economy cannot be maintained, however, if it oscillates between threats of an imminent collapse of asset values and employment and threats of accelerating inflation and rampant speculation, especially if the threats are sometimes realised.”
– Hyman Minksy, Stabilizing an Unstable Economy

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