Munger: A little inequality is good for the economy

In This Article:

Investing icon Charlie Munger, Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK-B, BRK-A) vice-chairman and Warren Buffett's long-time business partner, says wealth inequality is "the inevitable consequence" of policies that make a nation grow richer and elevate the poor.

"I think that to some extent, the complaint about the rich getting richer as the as a result of the COVID panic, I think that's a misplaced concern. Nobody was trying to make the rich richer. We were trying to save the whole economy under terrible conditions. And I think, by and large, we made the most practical decisions that were available to us," Munger said on Wednesday at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the Daily Journal Corporation (DJCO), where he serves as chairman of the board.

When asked if the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates low will only exacerbate income inequality, Munger prefaced that "it's hard to know what exact macroeconomic policy is correct. Because no one knows for sure, just how much government intervention is wise, and what point the government should stop intervening."

The 97-year-old investor added that he doesn't have "any great gift" at making macroeconomic predictions either.

The policies made the wealthy owners of financial assets were not a "deliberate choice" but instead an "accidental byproduct of trying to save the whole civilization." What's more, it was "probably wise" that those policies were implemented.

"And it wasn't some malevolence of the rich that caused it. It was an accident. And the next time around why the poor will get richer faster than the rich, that things circulate it. Who gets rich faster by class is going to vary over time, and I don't think anybody should be too concerned by it," Munger said.

He proceeded to point out that a prosperous nation requires a free market system.

"And if you have a free market system that's trying to get rich in the way recommended by Adam Smith, what happens is that it's a very irritating system because the poverty that causes so much misery is also causing the growth that makes everybody get out of poverty. In other words, to some extent, it's a self-correcting system."

"That makes the whole thing very awkward. And it's a shame that the economics textbooks don't emphasize how much a growing economy needs poverty in order to get out of poverty. And if you try and reduce the poverty too much, it's counterproductive," Munger said.