WM Market Reports
Review: The Rich In Public Opinion By Rainer Zitelmann

This news service reviews a chunky new study of how people in the US, Germany, the UK, France and other places view the wealthy and what those attitudes suggest for the future. It also has lessons for those advising HNW and ultra-HNW individuals.
In this day and age when sensitivities and prejudices are regular
front-page news shaping our politics, unjust views about the
“rich” and the wider issue of “classism” don’t appear to garner
much attention. A new study of how wealthy people are viewed,
however, deserves a wider audience, not least from wealth
managers.
Germany-based academic and businessman Dr Rainer
Zitelmann has a new book, The Rich In Public
Opinion, published by the CATO Institute. An outspoken
defender of free enterprise, Dr Zitelmann puts aside rhetoric to
analyze, in considerable detail, how people view those they
consider to be rich. Running to 463 pages, this book with
its charts and detailed footnotes packs a scholarly punch. Dr
Zitelmann commissioned his own research, and draws on a wide
range of other findings to uncover attitudes. He looks at
Germany, the US, the UK and France in particular, and probes
attitudes toward wealth by the mainstream media, social
media, film and television. There is also a particularly
detailed analysis of the “Panama Papers” and “Paradise Papers”
coverage of a few years ago, revealing how journalists often
skated over the fact that the data “leaked” from various offshore
law firms had in fact been stolen. Dr Zitelmann restrains his
views, but the reader never entirely forgets his distaste for
these episodes and the conduct by part of the media.
What emerges from his book overall is that advocates for free
enterprise have work to do. The book notes, for example, that a
significant chunk of the surveyed population subscribe to an
envy-driven “zero-sum” view of the world (my loss is your gain,
and vice versa). Even among those who aren’t envious and take a
more benevolent view of how economies work, may have ambivalent
views about “the rich”. This goes far beyond a simplistic “Left”
or “Right” political chart. One telling fact is that most of
those who distrust and disapprove of the rich base their
attitudes without even knowing a millionaire. Lack of familiarity
makes it easier for people to view “the rich” as an alien
species. And such a lack of contact makes it easier to scapegoat
groups such as “bankers” and “speculators”, possibly leading to
demands for confiscatory taxes and worse.
The author goes into considerable detail outlining the status of
“prejudice research” – a hot topic right now for obvious reasons
– and seeks to explain why people who are envious of the wealthy,
for example, assume that the latter group are cold, mean,
aggressive and lack empathy. One factor – which might make people
of certain views uncomfortable – is that by diminishing the moral
stature of a rich person, the envier can feel better about
himself or herself, rather than asking the hard question of why
they aren’t as successful in life. Dislike of the rich, and
adherence to certain political and cultural attitudes, in Dr
Zitelmann’s formulation, is a coping or compensation
strategy.
Here is a telling paragraph: “The assertion that one is
morally superior is, of course, impossible to objectively prove.
And at the same time, the psychological compensation function of
such claims is clear: claiming that the rich have worse family
lives, are morally inferior, or generally do not have healthy
interpersonal relationships allows one top compensate for an
inferiority complex and place oneself above those with higher
social status.” (Page 100.)
All these insights are valuable, and to the mind of this
reviewer, accurate. What perhaps is also necessary is to
understand a bit more about why hostility to “the rich” is at
such elevated levels, beyond the psychological reasons that the
study unearths. For example, surely one major causal factor in
recent years was taxpayer bailout of banks. However simplistic
and false the “evil banker” narrative may be, the sight of famous
institutions being rescued with huge sums of public money stirred
anger that was not about envy or zero-sum thinking, but quite the
opposite. It might have been politically and economically
impossible to allow certain institutions to go bust, but the
bailouts were very easily portrayed as “one rule for the rich,
another for everyone else”. Quantitative easing has also inflated
certain assets and hit others, magnifying inequality. Zoning laws
and other forces have squeezed the availability of residential
accommodation. It is hard for young adults to take a confident
view of future wealth if they still have to live in Mom’s
basement.
The author touches on why the zero-sum fallacy is widely
ingrained (it goes back to human pre-history when people lived in
small tribes); it might be useful in future to understand more
deeply why fallacious attitudes about business and wealth are so
persistent. Some of this might be a pure echo-chamber effect – if
a person dislikes wealthy people, in today’s climate they are not
going to get much pushback from their peers. We are more tribal
in our thinking than we would like to admit, and it takes a lot
of self-discipline to curb such biases. (The insights of
behavioral finance are useful here.) In future, other researchers
should get an idea of what pupils in school learn about business,
if at all. Weak or non-existent financial literacy is a major
problem – and that surely might explain, in part, why attitudes
about “the rich” are what they are.
Humans learn many of their ideas not through abstract treatises,
but through stories, whether in print or on the screen. And it
seems that this is an area where defenders of open, free
enterprise models should concentrate more effort in the future.
The stories of great entrepreneurs and inventors can still seize
attention if told entertainingly enough.
The Rich In Public Opinion is an eye-opening study that
hopefully will stimulate more debate and more research in future.
(To view a couple of recent articles here by Dr Zitelmann, see here and here.)