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Another thought of wealth increasingly concentrating in the hands of the few relates to the so-called quantitative easing programs that essentially push money into the economy. One basic definition of inflation is "too much money chasing too few goods and services". The basic laws of supply and demand make it pretty clear that if demand surges the price will rise, and it doesn't take much thought to see that artificially pushing money into an economy will result in an increase in demand which in turn will stoke rising prices. The rising prices hurt people on fixed incomes the most (typically these people include pensioners and the poorest), so a program that pushes money into the economy without considering where it ends up will benefit the rich at the expense of the poor.
President Obama has been credited with causing the DJIA to rise back to the levels it was before the 2008 crash. Quite aside from the fact economic cycles work regardless of man-made electoral cycles and economic issues are far more complex than the increasingly silly partisan bickering relating to who happened to be in the White House at any given time, where the DJIA is trading is only part of the picture. If the assorted QE programs do little more than provide money to the wealthiest, who invest it in the stock market because they don't particularly need anything over and above what they are already buying, the market rises without giving any benefit at all to the poorest. Essentially what has happened is that the government has created a fountain of money but only those closest to the fountain get to drink their fill. Those further away maybe get a few splashes, those further still get nothing. But the money the government uses to throw around with carefree abandon has to either be raised through taxation or borrowing, both of which once again hit those towards the bottom end of society who can neither restructure their affairs to avoid the taxes nor lobby government for special treatment.
President Obama has been credited with causing the DJIA to rise back to the levels it was before the 2008 crash. Quite aside from the fact economic cycles work regardless of man-made electoral cycles and economic issues are far more complex than the increasingly silly partisan bickering relating to who happened to be in the White House at any given time, where the DJIA is trading is only part of the picture. If the assorted QE programs do little more than provide money to the wealthiest, who invest it in the stock market because they don't particularly need anything over and above what they are already buying, the market rises without giving any benefit at all to the poorest. Essentially what has happened is that the government has created a fountain of money but only those closest to the fountain get to drink their fill. Those further away maybe get a few splashes, those further still get nothing. But the money the government uses to throw around with carefree abandon has to either be raised through taxation or borrowing, both of which once again hit those towards the bottom end of society who can neither restructure their affairs to avoid the taxes nor lobby government for special treatment.