The scholarship is not democratic. The changes in the stock market, far from being an honest representation of the state of the economy are nothing but a barometer for the rich, educated elite whose fortunes are tied to performance on Wall Street, while the vast majority of the population becomes a spectator in increasing numbers to advance or retreat. Psychology, technology, education and social status have all become obstacles to the equitable distribution of shares of restricted donations, and worse, perpetuate the imbalance by their very nature.
In the stock market, the rich get richer while the rest. . . Just think they do.
There is an unspoken myth that participation in the stock market is wide and deep in America, and that his fortune is equal – a truly all-inclusive democracy, and with a single shot at Bonanza. In a way, Wall Street has come to define America, and equality of opportunity it represents. No matter how humble station, the American dream is available through prudent investments in the stock market long term.
The mainstream media in the United States support this assumption, the rise of corporate and investment shows that the segments of finance in the news, covering all the headlines of daily tilt joyful or threatening in the great pinball. Finance has become a new growth industry because it is based on the growing desire of larger groups of viewers to the immediate and insightful news and analysis. On the web, sex is still king, with the porn finance from behind. A noun, a verb, and a symbol will get readers to your blog almost as soon as a scantily clad avatar.
Only one third of Americans participate in the stock market by holding stocks in one way or another. Although many people, it is certainly not the strong majority that democracy requires. However, changes in the performance of equity markets affect thirty-five per cent of the population directly. However, the calculation suggests that the best example of an entire group may be in a pseudo zero-sum game is to track changes, their statements do nothing better than average.
The real increase in wealth occur in smaller segmented sections of the stock purchase of the entire population. Owning shares alone is no guarantee of success.
For most owners of public shares, stock ownership comes through the back door in the market products which include resources such as mutual funds or market incentives, such as breaks in net pension tax accompanying the purchase of stock in how 401 (k) plans do. People invest for the tax break and consider the risk of small or nonexistent that their equity investments in stocks will melt. They are not stock market investors as they are investors tax relief.
In terms of ownership of risk – where the higher risk means greater reward potential – the large amount of stock held by the Americans themselves immune to the great rewards of stock ownership, believing wrongly low risk farms widespread return lowest widespread rewards. For people who own mutual funds automated 401 (k) plans, or received shares of the company for which they work, character and motivation of their investment to condemn the law of averages, still existing on the fat part of the curve. They will never beat the market because they are on the market.
And while most consider the rapid and inexorable advance of the value of the Dow an important way to dispose of their investments involved in the great game of wealth creation easy, it is also an illusion. Despite her impressive scorecard, the stock market has only an average real rate of return of about 4% over the long term, once adjusted for inflation. Hardly become rich quickly – or slowly – Plan many think.
Direct participation in equity markets is the only way out from under the curve and have any realistic chance of beating inflation and real addition, sports car purchase, take vacation, snorting coke ” wealth “.
Assemble the first fund, read a little about what you do, the hunt for a broker, and choosing among thousands of shares to be purchased separately in a minimum board lots are not Americans, that are in any large The relative number. According to the Federal Reserve Board “Survey of Consumer Finances,” only about 18% stake in the stock market is in this mode. Less than one in five Americans had the opportunity to work directly on the American dream, and pit their guts and faith against all odds.
Certainly, advances in online technology over the last ten years have made participation in broader stock market, what with the proliferation of discount brokers and do it yourself on stock transactions online. Wall Street for Dummies. However, direct participation in the market has not progressed much beyond 18% in 2007, among 13% of 1991. It has never been easier to buy shares, and with two large dams, so few people took advantage of the chance to get big. Clearly, the stock market does not represent America, where 80% of the population does not participate directly in capital assets of companies in the country, and are not part of a fundamental part of capitalism free market.
Contemporary culture is painted securities on Wall Street, the Dow and Nasaq, giving the impression of a country deeply wired to the fortunes of the market in all demographic spectrums. Analysis Stock market participation, however, clearly identifies serious barriers to entry that makes Wall Street, definitely an exclusive club.
An exclusive club of wealthy, educated men in occupations of high status.
Wealth (such as male pattern baldness), is inherited. If you are clever enough to be born rich, beautiful parents, chances are that you are clever enough to have your own children to repeat the trick. The offspring of wealthy households that inherit much more trust accounts. Basic knowledge and principles of liability for all the family capital that comes with the bag. Other people, who lack both the capital and the joy of living, making their first contract for the acquisition of a place decidedly disadvantaged. In a very undemocratic, a major barrier to entry seems to be that you were born.
The Federal Reserve Board Survey of Consumer Finances also reveals that it is better to be born male. Men dominate the financial world, and women have a long way to go, you’re more than twice as likely to be a man if you invest directly in the stock market.
Education forms an obstacle, because there is a direct correlation between rates of participation in the stock market and levels of schooling. Americans Not surprisingly, the world of finance is a complex and disciplined, the most educated are over-represented in the markets. Thirty five per cent of households graduated from the College of stocks, more than all other classes combined. Easy access to transparent information is a necessary element of an informed market decision, college graduates and it is, how to find it.
Another trait shared among the wealthy, intelligent and men is that of senior status. It appears that very few rich, well-educated men work in the bowels of fast food, and managers of shopping cart very little investment in stocks to some degree. Although there are no studies to support this kind of detail, we imagine the job description most popular among the participants of the stock market is “vice-president of something.”
Just being on the market has a social value cache on the greens or dinners, and knowing the lingo is a secret handshake of sorts on long transatlantic flights in first class, “People tell me I must spend more confidence in the superior responsibility to leverage offshore asset classes. Who do you like in Singapore? If, on the other hand, the big guy in the head office keeps saying “I must go to the box” Throughout the flight to St. Pete’s, chances are you’re not in the market.
Ultimately, stocks carry a high degree of risk that most Americans prefer to avoid. The higher the degree of risk assumed, the greater the amount of the reward. In this mode, not only participation in the stock market but the market return are related to degrees of risk. Those who are willing and able to assume a higher risk tend to consolidate and get richer, and at rates beyond those whose risk tolerance is simply not up.
Economic sociology tells us that both alienation and economic strata are better indicators of risk tolerance, and are rewarded with more regular checks outsized. Essentially, stinking rich people can afford to take it in the teeth from time to time, so that may be embarrassing. Risk is another order of magnitude when the difference between a loss is the polite tut tut at the club and the life in your minivan with the family. The opportunity to participate in risk is limited by the objective importance of failure.
Behavioral finance suggests that risk tolerance is also governed by human frailties. Most small investors understand that markets are a game fixed for Goliath and well connected. This keeps the market participation only in bold, or as researchers have learned to know the players. The game requires a certain set of traits unhappy man, a taste for a reasonable risk, and the sad affliction always overestimate the capacity and profits, while ignoring or rationalizing away losses simultaneously. Finance is another sport that testosterone plays a decisive role. This is something masculine.
Entry on Wall Street is prohibited for people without high levels of social and economic capital. The size and influence of this capital determines the amount of risk aversion, and acts as a limiter on the possibility of consolidating a wealth markets. In this way the free market, capitalism and market economy have created a system of wealth and power that is increasingly oligarchic, self-sustaining and completely undemocratic.
The amazing bull market just ended only served to accelerate the process, as markets boom encourage those who can push the limits of risk with mountains of capital. The limits of risk is apparently highly leveraged in a puzzle soup of acronyms, with absolutely no idea what will happen if for once, you were wrong.
The sudden collapse of the market and the general maelstrom of economic distress of the end of 2008 expected to bare the inequities of free investment stock market. Much of America has invested in the markets had their hopes and broken dreams, and their ability to spend cauterized. This loss of jobs and spelled deportation for four fifths of the country lived beyond their means, trying to follow a dream they have refused entry to silence, and depend on the largesse of investors market seemingly endless disposable income.
For those who have had the opportunity to take the greatest risks and where risks are followed ensured survival in a club constantly decreasing the wealth and power synthesis. . . they were all “haircuts”. For this elite class of investors, expansion and recession did little more wriggle on very large numbers on the flow of personal financial statements. If you found you had to sell the house in the Hamptons, in the worst housing market in history, you were not in that class.
Instead of spreading wealth, booming markets gain focus and consolidate ownership of the power elite of the real America. In a crash, the process is the same, but brutal, when those who lack the resources to stay the course and take real risks for recovery are excluded, or worse, lose all faith in the value of risk and despair of the game Wall Street.
When the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose, who will? Those who have investments in the stock market, which have social status and resources to accept the risks that so few rewards. The large balance of retailers – small, individual traders, individually or in groups – can rarely do better than average – and average is barely above inflation. For two-thirds of Americans do not market to everyone, regardless of a puff.
There is nothing democratic “market”.