The HighBeta Rich, Robert Frank
The HighBeta Rich, Robert Frank
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The High-Beta Rich
How the Manic Wealthy Will Take Us to the Next Boom, Bubble, and Bust

Author: Robert Frank

Narrator: Paul Costanzo

Unabridged: 7 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 11/01/2011


Synopsis

The rich are not only getting richer, they are becoming more dangerous. Starting in the early 1980s the top one percent broke away from the rest of us to become the most unstable force in the economy. An elite that had once been the flat line on the American income charts—models of financial propriety—suddenly set off on a wild ride of economic binges.

Not only do they control more than a third of the country's wealth, their increasing vulnerability to the booms and busts of the stock market wreak havoc on our consumer economy, financial markets, communities, employment opportunities, and government finances.

Robert Frank's insightful analysis provides the disturbing big picture of high-beta wealth. His vivid storytelling brings you inside the mortgaged mansions, blown-up balance sheets, repossessed Bentleys and Gulfstreams, and wrecked lives and relationships:

How one couple frittered away a fortune trying to build America's biggest house—90,000 square feet with 23 full bathrooms, a 6,000 square foot master suite with a bed on a rotating platform—only to be forced to put it on the market because "we really need the money".Repo men who are now the scavengers of the wealthy, picking up private jets, helicopters, yachts and racehorses—the shiny remains of a decade of conspicuous consumption financed with debt, asset bubbles, "liquidity events," and soaring stock prices.How "big money ruins everything" for communities such as Aspen, Colorado whose over-reliance on the rich created a stratified social scene of velvet ropes and A-lists and crises in employment opportunities, housing, and tax revenues.
Why California's worst budget crisis in history is due in large part to reliance on the volatile incomes of the state's tech tycoons.The bitter divorce of a couple who just a few years ago made the Forbes 400 list of the richest people, the firing of their enormous household staff of 110, and how one former spouse learned the marvels of shopping at Marshalls, filling your own gas tank, and flying commercial.
Robert Frank's stories and analysis brilliantly show that the emergence of the high-beta rich is not just a high-class problem for the rich. High-beta wealth has national consequences: America's dependence on the rich + great volatility among the rich = a more volatile America. Cycles of wealth are now much faster and more extreme. The rich are a new "Potemkin Plutocracy" and the important lessons and consequences are brought to light of day in this engrossing book.

About Robert Frank

Robert Frank is a senior special writer at the Wall Street Journal, where he writes a weekly column and daily blog called The Wealth Report. He has been with the Journal for 13 years, with postings in Atlanta, London, Singapore, and New York, and was part of a team that won an Overseas Press Club Award in 1998 for its coverage of developing economies. Robert lives in New York with his wife and daughter.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Zak

In this book, the author makes the case that concentration of wealth among the global elite is the reason behind increasingly violent economic and market gyrations. This is further exacerbated by the fact that forms of wealth have shifted from primarily hard assets and "real" businesses built up ove......more

I'll admit it: I bought this book for the schadenfreude. I skimmed over the financial stats and took particular glee in reading about people going from billionaire to bankrupt overnight in the 2008 financial crisis. My favorite examples? A toss-up between the former billionaire who could no longer p......more

Despite the tremendous attention surrounding the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations in downtown Manhattan, you might continue to scratch your head in beginning to figure out just what exactly these demonstrators want. In some instances, it’s a ‘perp walk’ from Wall Street, so their eyes can feast upo......more

Goodreads review by Melissa

I've never read a non-fiction book, cover to cover, in one afternoon... until this book. The very rich are not living frugally - they are consuming very conspicuously and borrowing a lot of money to do it. What that means is that they do much better than the 99% of us when times are good and they los......more