::Business::
Automotive
Automotive-1
Automotive-2
Business and Finance
Business and Finance 01
Business and Finance 02
Business and Finance 03
Business and Finance 04
Business and Finance 05
Business and Finance 06
Business and Finance 07
Business and Finance 08
Business and Finance 09
Business and Finance 10
Business and Finance 11
Business and Finance 12
Business and Finance 13
Business and Finance 14
Business and Finance 15
Business and Finance 16
Business and Finance 17
Business and Finance 18
Business and Finance 19
Debts and Credit
Debts and Credit 01
Debts and Credit 02
Debts and Credit 03
Employment and Hiring
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
Home Business
Home Business 01
Home Business 02
Legal Matter 01
Legal Matter 02
Legal Matter 03
Legal Matter 04
Legal Matter 05
Legal Matters
Real Estate
 
::Computers and Internet::
Computers and Internet
Computers and Internet 01
Computers and Internet 02
Computers and Internet 03
Computers and Internet 04
Computers and Internet 05
Computers and Internet 06
Computers and Internet 07
Computers and Internet 08
Computers and Internet 09
Computers and Internet 10
Computers and Internet 11
Computers and Internet 12
Computers and Internet 13
Computers and Internet 14
Computers and Internet 15
Computers and Internet 16
Computers and Internet 17
Computers and Internet 18
Computers and Internet 19
Computers and Internet 20
Computers and Internet 21
Computers and Internet 22
 
::Family::
Child Care
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
Parenting
Parenting 01
Parenting 02
Parenting 03
Parenting 04
 
::Food and Drink::
Food and Drink
Food and Drink 01
Food and Drink 02
Food and Drink 03
Kitchen
 
::Health and Fitness::
Arthritis
Cancer Related
Depression
Diabetes
Exercise
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
Hair Loss
Weight Loss
Weight Loss 01
Weight Loss 02
 
::Home Improvement::
Home Improvement
Home Improvement 01
Home Improvement 02
Home Improvement 03
Home Improvement 04
Home Improvement 05
Home Improvement 06
 
::Internet Marketing::
Advertising and PR
Advertising and PR 01
Advertising and PR 02
Affiliate Marketing
Blogs
Copywriting
Email Marketing
Opt-In
Pay Per Click
RSS
Search Engines
Search Engines 01
Search Engines 02
Sitemap
Web Development
Web Development 01
Web Development 02
Web Development 03
Website Promotion
Website Promotion 01
Website Promotion 02
Website Promotion 03
Website Promotion 04
Website Promotion 05
Website Promotion 06
Website Promotion 07
Website Promotion 08
Website Promotion 09
Website Promotion 10
Website Traffic
Website Traffic 01
Website Traffic 02
Website Traffic 03
 
::Marketing and Sales::
Marketing and Sales
Marketing and Sales 01
Marketing and Sales 02
Marketing and Sales 03
Marketing and Sales 04
Marketing and Sales 05
Marketing and Sales 06
Marketing and Sales 07
Marketing and Sales 08
Marketing and Sales 09
Marketing and Sales 10
Marketing and Sales 11
Marketing and Sales 12
Marketing and Sales 13
Marketing and Sales 14
Marketing and Sales 15
Marketing and Sales 16
Marketing and Sales 17
Marketing and Sales 18
Marketing and Sales 19
Marketing and Sales 20
Marketing and Sales 21
Marketing and Sales 22
Marketing and Sales 23
Marketing and Sales 24
Marketing and Sales 25
Marketing and Sales 26
Marketing and Sales 27
Marketing and Sales 28
Marketing and Sales 29
Marketing and Sales 30
Marketing and Sales 31
Marketing and Sales 32
Marketing and Sales 33
Marketing and Sales 34
Marketing and Sales 35
 
::Online Business::
Online Business
Online Business 01
Online Business 02
Online Business 03
Online Business 04
Online Business 05
Online Business 06
Online Business 07
Online Business 08
Online Business 09
Online Business 10
Online Business 11
Online Business 12
Online Business 13
Online Business 14
Online Business 15
Online Business 16
Online Business 17
Online Business 18
Online Business 19
Online Business 20
Online Business 21
Online Business 22
Online Business 23
Online Business 24
Online Business 25
Online Business 26
Online Business 27
Online Business 28
Online Business 29
Online Business 30
Online Business 31
Online Business 32
Online Business 33
Online Business 34
Online Business 35
Online Business 36
Online Business 37
Online Business 38
 
::Pets::
Aquarium
Dog Training
Dogs
 
::Self Improvement and Motivation::
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
General 04
General 05
General 06
General 07
General 08
General 09
General 10
General 11
General 12
General 13
General 14
General 15
General 16
General 17
General 18
General 19
General 20
General 21
General 22
General 23
General 24
General 25
General 26
General 27
General 28
General 29
General 30
General 31
General 32
General 33
General 34
General 35
General 36
General 37
General 38
General 39
 
::Sports and Recreation::
General
General 01
General 02
General 03
 
::Travel and Leisure::
Gardening
Travel and Leisure
Travel and Leisure 1
Travel and Leisure 2
Travel and Leisure 3
 
::Women::
Women
Women 1
Women 2
Women 3
 
::Writing and Publishing::
Writing and Publishing
Writing and Publishing 1
Writing and Publishing 2
Writing and Publishing 3

 

content :: Business :: General 24

The Predicament of the Newly Rich

Important Info on what you're looking for. Based on popular searches.

They are the object of thinly disguised envy. They are the raw materials of vulgar jokes and the targets of popular aggression. They are the Newly Rich. Perhaps they should be dealt with more appropriately within the academic discipline of psychology, but then economics in a branch of psychology. To many, they represent a psychopathology or a sociopathology.



The Newly Rich are not a new phenomenon. Every generation has them. They are the upstarts, those who seek to undermine the existing elite, to replace it and, ultimately to join it. Indeed, the Newly Rich can be classified in accordance with their relations with the well-entrenched Old Rich. Every society has its veteran, venerable and aristocratic social classes. In most cases, there was a strong correlation between wealth and social standing. Until the beginning of this century, only property owners could vote and thus participate in the political process. The land gentry secured military and political positions for its off spring, no matter how ill equipped they were to deal with the responsibilities thrust upon them. The privileged access and the insiders mentality ("old boys network" to use a famous British expression) made sure that economic benefits were not spread evenly. This skewed distribution, in turn, served to perpetuate the advantages of the ruling classes.

Only when wealth was detached from the land, was this solidarity broken. Land ? being a scarce, non-reproducible resource ? fostered a scarce, non-reproducible social elite. Money, on the other hand, could be multiplied, replicated, redistributed, reshuffled, made and lost. It was democratic in the truest sense of a word, otherwise worn thin. With meritocracy in the ascendance, aristocracy was in descent. People made money because they were clever, daring, fortunate, visionary ? but not because they were born to the right family or married into one. Money, the greatest of social equalizers, wedded the old elite. Blood mixed and social classes were thus blurred. The aristocracy of capital (and, later, of entrepreneurship) ? to which anyone with the right qualifications could belong ? trounced the aristocracy of blood and heritage. For some, this was a sad moment. For others, a triumphant one.



The New Rich chose one of three paths: subversion, revolution and emulation. All three modes of reaction were the results of envy, a sense of inferiority and rage at being discriminated against and humiliated.



Some New Rich chose to undermine the existing order. This was perceived by them to be an inevitable, gradual, slow and "historically sanctioned" process. The transfer of wealth (and the power associated with it) from one elite to another constituted the subversive element. The ideological shift (to meritocracy and democracy or to mass- democracy as y Gasset would have put it) served to justify the historical process and put it in context. The successes of the new elite, as a class, and of its members, individually, served to prove the "justice" behind the tectonic shift. Social institutions and mores were adapted to reflect the preferences, inclinations, values, goals and worldview of the new elite. This approach ? infinitesimal, graduated, cautious, all accommodating but also inexorable and all pervasive ? characterizes Capitalism. The Capitalist Religion, with its temples (shopping malls and banks), clergy (bankers, financiers, bureaucrats) and rituals ? was created by the New Rich. It had multiple aims: to bestow some divine or historic importance and meaning upon processes which might have otherwise been perceived as chaotic or threatening. To serve as an ideology in the Althusserian sense (hiding the discordant, the disagreeable and the ugly while accentuating the concordant, conformist and appealing). To provide a historical process framework, to prevent feelings of aimlessness and vacuity, to motivate its adherents and to perpetuate itself and so on.

The second type of New Rich (also known as "Nomenclature" in certain regions of the world) chose to violently and irreversibly uproot and then eradicate the old elite. This was usually done by use of brute force coated with a thin layer of incongruent ideology. The aim was to immediately inherit the wealth and power accumulated by generations of elitist rule. There was a declared intention of an egalitarian redistribution of wealth and assets. But reality was different: a small group ? the new elite ? scooped up most of the spoils. It amounted to a surgical replacement of one hermetic elite by another. Nothing changed, just the personal identities. A curious dichotomy has formed between the part of the ideology, which dealt with the historical process ? and the other part, which elucidated the methods to be employed to facilitate the transfer of wealth and its redistribution. While the first was deterministic, long-term and irreversible (and, therefore, not very pragmatic) ? the second was an almost undisguised recipe for pillage and looting of other people' property. Communism and the Eastern European (and, to a lesser extent, the Central European) versions of Socialism suffered from this inherent poisonous seed of deceit. So did Fascism. It is no wonder that these two sister ideologies fought it out in the first half of the twentieth century. Both prescribed the unabashed, unmitigated, unrestrained, forced transfer of wealth from one elite to another. The proletariat enjoyed almost none of the loot.


Your Ad Here
The third way was that of emulation. The Newly Rich, who chose to adopt it, tried to assimilate the worldview, the values and the behaviour patterns of their predecessors. They walked the same, talked the same, clad themselves in the same fashion, bought the same status symbols, ate the same food. In general, they looked as pale imitations of the real thing. In the process, they became more catholic than the Pope, more Old Rich than the Old Rich. They exaggerated gestures and mannerisms, they transformed refined and delicate art to kitsch, their speech became hyperbole, their social associations dictated by ridiculously rigid codes of propriety and conduct. As in similar psychological situations, patricide and matricide followed. The Newly Rich rebelled against what they perceived to be the tyranny of a dying class. They butchered their objects of emulation ? sometimes, physically. Realizing their inability to be what they always aspired to be, the Newly Rich switched from frustration and permanent humiliation to aggression, violence and abuse. These new converts turned against the founders of their newly found religion with the rage and conviction reserved to true but disappointed believers.

Regardless of the method of inheritance adopted by the New Rich, all of them share some common characteristics. Psychologists know that money is a love substitute. People accumulate it as a way to compensate themselves for past hurts and deficiencies. They attach great emotional significance to the amount and availability of their money. They regress: they play with toys (fancy cars, watches, laptops). They fight over property, territory and privileges in a Jungian archetypal manner. Perhaps this is the most important lesson of all: the New Rich are children, aspiring to become adults. Having been deprived of love and possessions in their childhood ? they turn to money and to what it can buy as a (albeit poor because never fulfilling) substitute. And as children are ? they can be cruel, insensitive, unable to delay the satisfaction of their urges and desires. In many countries (the emerging markets) they are the only capitalists to be found. There, they spun off a malignant, pathological, form of crony capitalism. As time passes, these immature New Rich will become tomorrow's Old Rich and a new class will emerge, the New Rich of the future. This is the only hope ? however inadequate and meagre ? that developing countries have.



About The Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited" and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com

This article was posted on February 2, 2002some content courtesy ArticleCity.com




If you didn't find what you're looking for above. Check the navigation menu on the left. We're sure to have the information that you require. Thanks.