That headline makes quite a statement. But it’s true. The stock of so-called “financial capital,” or wealth — all the financial assets out there, which are ultimately claims on real capital — represents only the most tenuous long-term approximation of what our real capital is worth.
Certainly true: the stock (total dollar value) of “financial capital” goes up (in fits, starts, and reverses) over the decades as real capital is accumulated. But beyond that rough, big-picture relationship, the total value of financial assets tells us very little about the total value of real assets....
Which is why — I’ll say it again — Piketty should have called it Wealth in the 21st Century.Asymptosis
We Have No Idea What Our Capital is Worth
Steve Roth
1 comment:
Price is one dimensional (at least in a single currency), while value is multi-dimensional. True, buying and selling is possible, but that does not mean that price equals value at any time.
What is a cynic? A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. -- Oscar Wilde
BTW, the way I first heard that was not about cynics, but about economists. ;)
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