The modern financial system is fraught with inequality, creating a playing field heavily skewed in favor of the wealthy. Ordinary individuals, limited by a lack of resources, expertise, and insider information, face high risks and uncertain returns in financial markets. In contrast, capitalists and major financial institutions leverage insider trading and market manipulation to maximize profits with minimal exposure to loss. Such practices deepen economic inequality and have become a significant factor in reinforcing rigid class structures.
Inequality within financial markets
The resource and information gap between everyday people and capitalists
When retail investors step into the financial world, they are often met with significant information disadvantages. Unlike capitalists and major institutions with privileged access, ordinary people must depend on public market data—information that is frequently delayed and previously leveraged by the powerful.
- Case study: The Enron financial scandal
The Enron scandal of 2001 stands as a classic example of financial market inequities. Executives, armed with insider knowledge, cashed out millions before the company’s fall, while ordinary investors were kept in the dark about its real financial status. The result was devastating losses for small shareholders and enormous gains for those at the top.
Market manipulation and the zero-sum game
High-frequency trading (HFT) exploits technological advantages to generate profits from minute, fleeting market movements. Capable of executing millions of trades within a second, HFT systems give capitalists a decisive edge over ordinary investors, who lack the speed and infrastructure to compete in this time-sensitive environment.
- Merrill Lynch: A case of market manipulation
In 2019, Merrill Lynch faced a multi-million dollar fine for engaging in market manipulation. Investigators discovered that the firm used automated trading algorithms to create a false impression of market demand by generating a high volume of fake trades within short periods. This deceptive practice misled ordinary investors, causing financial losses due to misleading price movements, while Merrill Lynch profited from the artificial volatility.
The contradiction between the labor market and the financial market
Ordinary people are trapped in the labor market
For ordinary people, the uncertainty of participating in the financial market makes the labor market the primary means of acquiring wealth. Education, skill enhancement, and career advancement in companies form the only path for most people to pursue economic security.
- Real-life comparison
An ordinary office worker, even with a 5% annual salary increase, would need decades to achieve a certain level of financial freedom. Meanwhile, capitalists can earn hundreds of thousands of dollars in a single day through the financial market. For example, in 2020, renowned global investor George Soros made over $1 billion in just two days through a successful operation in the financial market.
The labor market serves the capitalists
The operation of the labor market is actually driven by capitalists. The efforts of ordinary workers are often centered around meeting the needs of capitalists. From college entrance exams, university education, to career planning, the majority of people are striving to become “higher-level employees.” The end result is that, despite working harder, ordinary people are only given the opportunity to create more profits for capitalists, rather than achieving true economic independence.
The vicious circle of class stratification
The design of the capitalist financial system ensures that ordinary people and capitalists are always on different tracks. The core mechanisms of this system are as follows:
- Differences in wealth accumulation methods
- Ordinary people: Accumulate wealth slowly through labor and wages.
- Capitalists: Achieve rapid wealth growth through capital appreciation.
- Education and employment division
- Ordinary people strive for higher education and work skills to meet market demands, but this “upward path” is often designed by the elite class to serve capital expansion.
- Capitalists use financial tools to amplify wealth
- Stock buybacks and dividends: Capitalists directly benefit from company dividends through equity holdings and use buyback policies to increase stock value.
- Tax advantages: Capitalists further minimize wealth loss by taking advantage of lower capital gains tax rates.
Possibility of reform:
Scholars have long pointed out that the current state of the capitalist financial system is not immutable. Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz has emphasized that the inequality in financial markets can be alleviated through policy reforms. For example, limiting high-frequency trading, increasing capital gains taxes, and expanding ordinary people’s access to capital markets are all feasible measures to reduce wealth distribution inequality.
At Yicheng Commonweal, we believe that such reforms cannot rely solely on the government. Therefore, we will propose a “financial system that is accessible and beneficial to all,” and we hope to unite the efforts of various social groups, enterprises, and individuals to drive deep innovation and gradual reform.
While the capitalist financial system undeniably plays a role in driving economic growth, it is also one of the key factors contributing to class stratification. Only through reforms that allow universal participation can the financial market truly become a tool for promoting social equity, rather than a weapon for capitalists to consolidate their power.