Economic Cycle Spins For The Rich

 | Dec 19, 2014 02:46PM ET

One of the clear historic signs of debt and of financial bubbles is that the rich get richer… at least until the bubbles finally burst.

Janet Yellen recently commented on concerns about rising income inequality and said that it was impeding America’s economic mobility. Ironically, it’s the very Fed and central bank policies around the world that drive and exaggerate that inequality.

The top 10% control over 90% of the wealth and financial assets in the U.S. today. The top 1% controls 42% and the top 0.1% an astounding 22%.

So who gains the most when you have a weak recovery generated largely by monetary injections and zero interest rate?

It’s the rich, and even more so — the ultra-rich…

Just like during Roaring 20s and Roaring 2000s, it’s a natural occurrence that the rich get richer in fall bubble seasons…

h2 Rich Get Richer, Almost Always/h2

Financial assets bubble and they also represent much of the new entrepreneurial class that booms unbelievably when major new technologies and companies move into the mainstream landscape on the S-Curve .

But in this bubble boom, the Federal Reserve and central banks around the world have increasingly amplified the natural bubble and haven’t stopped feeding it since the financial meltdown of 2008.

A case in point is looking back at the top of the last major debt and financial asset bubble in 1929. The top 1% controlled 52% of the wealth in the U.S. Once that bubble burst that number fell by 35% in 1942 (winter season) and ultimately to 23% in 1978 (near end of summer season).

That’s a 56% drop in relative wealth.

The free market capitalist system has its own natural dynamics and one byproduct is that it promotes the rich getting richer when major new technologies are moving into the mainstream for the first time in the fall bubble boom season. It’s at that time when the economy needs investors and entrepreneurs to take major risks and then, rewards them handsomely for that.

In the following seasons (winter, spring and summer), the rich lose their wealth little by little. The everyday worker and middle class end up reaping some of the benefits of super innovative periods like from 1914 to 1929 or 1994 to 2007.

By looking at the chart below you can see that there’s a big difference in this bubble economy, especially since 2008 when the Fed and central banks stepped in with their unprecedented stimulus.

You can see how the top 0.1% has taken most of the gains in this boom and even more since 2002. The 0.1% has taken such a great share that the top 1% pales in comparison.