Archive for December 10th, 2010

How much $$$ makes a millionaire ?

December 10, 2010

I find that the rhetoric about extension of the Bush tax cuts demonstrates the economic ignorance of most of our elected officials..

Sen. Chuck Schumer and Sen. Barbara “Don’t call me M’am” Boxer are running around screaming that how extending the high bracket tax breaks is “simply giving undeserved tax breaks to millionaires and billionaires”.

Yes indeed, the high bracket includes some millionaires and billionaires.

Here’s the rub: it includes way more people who aren’t millionaires or billionaires.

The high end brackets start at $250,000.

In 2008, according to the IRS, about 138 million people filed tax returns.

Of the 138 million, approximately 2.8 million (2% of total returns) reported AGI greater than $250,000.

354,093 tax payers  — 12.8% of the 2.8 million high bracketers – reported AGI greater than $1 million.

In other words, almost 9 out of 10 tax payers in the vilified high brackets earn less than $1 million.

Hmmm.

Now, anybody who has taken a business or economics course knows that there is a difference between wealth and earnings.  (Note – this group doesn’t include many Congressmen, Senators, or members of the Administration).

Earnings are a “flow” and wealth is a “stock”.

Think water flowing into a pool. The accumulated water in the pool is liquid wealth.

Now, some people who earn more than $1 million spend it all  They accumulate no meaningful wealth. They’re not really millionaires.  They’re wasteful  idiots.

And, some people who earn less than $1 million annually, practice thrift and savings … and accumulate more than $1 million.

Obviously, these people are evil millionaires and should be penalized for not spending like a drunken Congressman.  They should be taxed high every year and then have their wealth confiscated when they die.

Huh?

My take: Schumer and Boxer wouldn’t know a millionaire if they saw one – unless they were just looking around the Senate. Then, the odds would be in their favor.

IRS Data:
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/06in23ar.xls

FT asks: “Are all MBA students narcissistic … or just most of them?”

December 10, 2010

Financial Times, The narcissistic world of the MBA student,  November 7, 2010

Success requires ambition, drive and the persistence and resilience to overcome setbacks and to work constantly on weaknesses.

But, the current generation of business school students entering the workforce have

  • a remarkable sense of entitlement
  • a reluctance to face honest feedback and the consequences of one’s actions
  • an unwillingness to acknowledge and engage in the competition that characterizes organizational life.

A recent meta-analysis found that between 1982 and 2009 there was a dramatic increase in narcissistic personality traits among MBA students – in part characterized by

  • an inability to take the perspective of others
  • a dependence on others for affirmation
  • a tendency to value oneself regardless of real achievements
  • a quest for constant praise.

Even if students didn’t arrive at the leading business schools already narcissistic, orientation activities would soon make them so.

One of the first things they are told is how accomplished and wonderful they are.

And the result of all of this coddling …  criticism is as likely to beget quitting as any efforts to improve.

Business schools must make changes to affect the pernicious culture of entitlement and narcissism.