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    28 commenti

    1. TheGoalkeeper on

      I would say more important. Can’t buy a house with my salary alone. Can only buy a house when I inherit sufficient money. Its separating the population, widening the gap in lifestyle even between those who earn the same.

    2. tupakkarulla on

      It was always more important if your family is rich enough

    3. Necromartian on

      Question: What is the point of working hard, if the only way to succeed in life is to have rich parents?

      Because this is starting to sound like a game where you only win if you refuse to play.

    4. Realistic-Cash975 on

      In Portugal it already is.
      If you inherit just 1 house in the suburbs of Lisbon you can rent it for 1k easily.
      If you have just completed highschool, you can get a job that pays a little over 1k net.

      You’d be bringing in around 2k net per month. For context, tha’s way more than 99% of jobs that require higher education can pay in this country. For example, a high school teacher would only make a little more than that at the very end of their career (some never get there).

    5. CertainMiddle2382 on

      Remember arguing at age 17 with a schoolmate pretending to want to rebel against capitalistic society and living frugal that they would inherit millions before age 30 and quickly forget about what they told me.

      Fast forward 25 years. 3 million € house was indeed inherited around age 30. Only thing daddy wanted was a grandson. That particular guy is still working a NGO job with plenty of social capital and minimal salary (60%, because one just has one life right?)

      I know people actually practicing what is often considered the highest paid profession. And still, inheritance is playing a larger a larger role.

      ZIRP and asset inflation is the reason…

      I foresee a quick return to Feudalism with balls, fancy dances and horseback hunting. Work will soon again play little role in ones social success.

    6. BobBobBobBobBobDave on

      In the UK, I have friends who earn far less than me but grandparents left them a property or money to buy a property when they were in their twenties. They are now mortgage free owners of a family home.

      If I work and earn more than them for the rest of my life, I still probably won’t end up as financially secure as they are, because I will have had to rent for a decade or more and then paid a mortgage for 20 years or more in the meantime.

    7. SpiderDK1 on

      My inheriting from my great-grandfather was stolen by russian “dekulakization”… and my current achievements were destroyed by them as well…

    8. St3fano_ on

      >As a share of output, annual inheritance flows have doubled in France since the 1960s, and nearly trebled in Germany since the 1970s

      Oh wow, the generation that’s inheriting from the one that experienced the birth of the modern middle class is making more than the one who inherited from their farmer parents.

      The massive issue is that wages between the 60/70s and today didn’t increase anywhere nearly as they did for the previous 60 years. That’s the part of the circle that’s broken.

      But we aren’t going to acknowledge that, workers will be given yet another scapegoat to hate for their condition, workers themselves because of course they’ll find some excuse to keep the rich out of this and blame it all on the random bloke who inherited the house he grew up in and his parents savings set aside when the average Joe could still save a decent amount of money.

    9. The only time I really expect me to have enough money to get a house is when my parents die…

    10. whatyourheartdesires on

      Nearly??? I know people who make minimum wage but inherited an apartment and with that they live better than a person with a good salary who has to have a mortgage (IF they qualify for it first…)

    11. demon_of_laplace on

      It also causes problems for childbirth. 

      If you don’t afford family sized living near schools/daycare/work, you don’t afford children.You can’t make it work if you spend 8+ hours working, then 4 hours commuting.

      You will focus on career instead. A great percentage will not reach their goals before becoming infertile. That kills societies.

      edit: or before they get their inheritance.

    12. typoeman on

      My dad told me that he and a lot of his generation are giving retirement savings the finger and having fun in their 50s while they can. I don’t blame him and I dont expect a bent nickle from him when hes gone, but I think a lot of my (millenial) generation is going to (once again) not see a big benefit that previous generations saw.

    13. In France 60% of the asset are inherited. Inheriting is what determine your financial asset but also, most of the time, being born in a rich family allow you to have better education and better jobs with higher salary.
      In reality nothing is fair in life : health, intelligence, appearance are also mostly luck at birth.

    14. MaddogFinland on

      It’s extremely important and I would argue that it has been growing importance for at least 25 years or my whole career. My wife and I are of middle middle class roots and won’t see much, but we made up for it by climbing much higher. We will be working to leave more for our daughter because speaking facts it’s just not optional anymore.

    15. Other_Class1906 on

      “Arbeit muss sich wieder lohnen” (= “work must pay off again”)

      … usually something heard from neoliberals who want lower taxes… Funny how this could also be read differently in this context: “why bother? there is no social mobility anyway…”

    16. Bread_addict on

      This has been the case in Germany for a long time. Inequality has been growing again since the post-war boom. Almost all of the wealthiest people in Germany belong to old money families that often have been rich since the Kaiserreich. It’s very hard to break through the ceiling that is placed upon a hard working German. Taxes are very high for the most productive (in terms of monetary value created) working people and very low for people who live off inheritance or asset income, loopholes even allow the richest people to get off the hook with minimal tax expenses.

    17. TinyMassLittlePriest on

      Fuck you mean ‘becoming’?

      People forget how the world works?

    18. Bowgentle on

      This was what Thomas Piketty was pointing out – capital now has a higher return than labour.

    19. Nearly?

      I’m 35 working in a good industry since 21. I will likely never afford to buy a 3 bedroom house.

    20. apxseemax on

      Inheritance has always been MORE important than working. You can work all you want, in your lifetime (excluding utter luck on your side and absolute stupidity on their side – So basically a normal life) you will be unable to achieve anthing a person is able to achieve that headstarts with a 100k $ at the age of 18 because the parents inherited. Inheritance is similar to the process of compound interest. Even if the parents do not directly give the money to the 18yo, but spend it in his interest, you will not be able to catch that person EVER, even if you are the most dedicated student with incredible, but still normal, learning talents. Thats hoe fucked up inheritance and compound mechanisms are.

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