This is correct. The concentration of capital grows so large that the owner literally cannot spend it faster than it grows. If it was simply vaulted and ignored, deflation would result, from that cash being removed from circulation.
Thanks to our central banks, any deflation pressure is seen as a license to print more money, which is a tax on non-circulating savings. To avoid this, holders of cash do their best to invest as much as possible.
Investment is emphatically not economically equivalent to spending. It's a lot like spinning your cash around in place so everyone knows you can still spend it. It does not create jobs or help the middle class; only actual spending does that.
> Investment is emphatically not economically equivalent to spending. It's a lot like spinning your cash around in place so everyone knows you can still spend it. It does not create jobs or help the middle class; only actual spending does that.
This is a little strong, isn't it? Investment can certainly lead to job creation for the middle and working classes, if that investment is going into enterprises that need more labor and have the potential for growth. Whether there is much potential for growth after decades of regressive tax policies and hoarding by the upper and ruling classes, with everyone else living paycheck to paycheck, is quite debatable (my money is on 'no'), as is how much new labor is actually needed in the first place. But private investment can certainly create jobs and economic growth.
In theory investment creates jobs by providing companies the cash they need to grow. But right now the government is flooding the financial markets with newly created money, so investments by wealthy people probably aren't having any effect.
Thanks to our central banks, any deflation pressure is seen as a license to print more money, which is a tax on non-circulating savings. To avoid this, holders of cash do their best to invest as much as possible.
Investment is emphatically not economically equivalent to spending. It's a lot like spinning your cash around in place so everyone knows you can still spend it. It does not create jobs or help the middle class; only actual spending does that.