A Biblical proverb states: “He becomes poor
who deals with a slack (idle) hand;
but the hand of the diligent makes rich (produces wealth).” Wealth and riches – the whole world
wants it. The culture of America
assigns a social status to the abundance of things which you possess. And there
are some who believe that those who are wealthy should pay the bills of those
who are not. They believe in a transfer of private property from the “rich” to
the “poor.” I put these words in quotes because people by nature define those
who are rich as people who have more than they do. And those same people
defining the poor show that they have never been to a third world country.
Regardless of what you believe individuals should do with regard to the giving
of their property, this nation largely does not know poverty nearly as well as
much of the world knows it. The poorest among us are rich by comparison. We are
a rich country. But there are a few simple facts about riches and wealth that
are critical for all to grasp.
Fact
#1: Wealth is not money. Money is a medium of exchange. And money is a medium
of exchange because everyone will accept it in exchange for goods or services.
Everything has a relative value stated in the medium of exchange, or currency. It is called currency because it is widely (seemingly
universally) accepted and circulated from person to person. Currency only has
value because everyone agrees that it has value. If you have a million dollars
while in Manhattan ,
that can be very useful. If you have a million dollars while in Antarctica , it is of no value because it is not what you
want. You are not wealthy there. Wealth there is having very effective clothing
to protect you from the extreme environment and expeditious transportation to
get you out of Antarctica and back to warmer
latitudes. Again, wealth is not money. Wealth is having what you need and what
you want and plenty of it. Money simply lends itself toward the exchange of
currency for the goods and services you need and want. If you need or want
them, they are of value to you.
Fact
# 2: Wealth is not a zero-sum game; wealth is created. There is not a fixed
amount of wealth in the world, wherein adding one dollar here means it was
subtracted somewhere else. Here is a straightforward example. Not all the gold
that exists in the world has been discovered. So let us just say that there are
10 million pounds of undiscovered, unknown gold reserves that exist underground
on this planet (there is likely much more). That is a nice round number. If
gold is selling at $1,000 per ounce (another nice round number) and all this
gold is discovered at once, then $160 billion in additional wealth would
be introduced into the world’s economic system. This would be gold which did
not previously exist, mind you. Now let
us extend that logic to where you and I live. That gold has value because
people everywhere want it. It
therefore holds intrinsic value.
People will use dollars or euros or yen (or whatever currency) to buy that
gold. It would be immediately in demand. (Ignore for a moment the fact that the
introduction of that much additional gold into the world market will drive down
the price of gold, because more of it is available and therefore its increased
supply will drive down its marginal demand.)
My
point is that wealth is created by
producing what people want. If
what is produced is wanted, it holds value. Therefore, just like gold can be
mined and made available, each of us can likewise produce goods and services
that are of value to people around us. The production of those goods and
services creates wealth to the extent they are wanted or in demand.
There
are a few reasons these concepts are so important. One is because there is an
ardent movement in our culture to cast those who are the Haves as people who are mean and oppressive and can only have obtained
their wealth by unethical means. Conversely the Have-nots are cast as people who are the poor, disenfranchised and
otherwise abused by the Haves (last I
checked, this was called coveting).
This line of thinking is the bedrock argument for taking some portion of the property
that the Haves have and transferring
it to the Have-nots, simply because
they do not presently possess it (and this very act itself would be the obtaining of wealth by unethical means). The logic of this thinking is fatally flawed. Just
on one level, who decides where the boundary is between being classified as a Have and being classified as a Have-not? What qualifies those who draw
that boundary to do so? Is the desired outcome that eventually everyone is
equally poor? When does private property no longer belong to its owner? The
fundamental presumption underneath this thinking is that additional wealth
cannot be created, that it is not possible for everyone to be Haves. The disciples of this line of
thinking could not possibly be more misguided. Most people in most third world
countries think all Americans are Haves.
Furthermore,
those who view the world in this class-warfare mindset (I call it the Philosophy of Envy) demonstrate an
ignorance of the simple fact that wealth can be created. It is created by the
efforts of individuals. However, wealth is not created by all individuals, only
by the diligent ones and among those who do create wealth, they do so with
varying results. The comparative diligence they apply in their trade often determines the relative value of the goods and services they produce.
So
if we simply let the above proverb instruct us, it tells us plainly that those
who are relatively idle will eventually lead an existence of shortage. They
will become poor. It also teaches us that diligence will produce wealth. So it
is important for us to grasp the meaning of diligence, so that we may apply its
power. Diligence is simply constancy in effort to accomplish something. It is painstaking
attentiveness and persistence in doing anything. The understood assumption is
that what is being done or pursued is of commercial value (that it is worth
it). There are very few diligent players of video games. There are no diligent
watchers of soap operas and movies (both of which who devote hours and hours
each day to those activities) who are producing any wealth for themselves for
the time invested.
The
message is clear: we must all find what we can do that is of value to some market of individuals or organizations. We must diligently apply ourselves in that
pursuit. The more productive we can be, the more wealth we can create. Within
each of us there lies dormant a gold mine of value. For most, that vein of
gold stays undiscovered. It requires prospecting and lots of digging. It
requires drilling and excavation. When once discovered, it requires
considerable effort to process and refine that “gold” into a desirable product.
This all requires work. But those skills, gifts, nacks and talents have the
potential for widespread value.
The
truth is you have a gold mine within yourself. The gold is often buried deep
within and most likely not developed to maximum potential. This is where hard
work pays off: developing and improving those skills Providence has given to you. Diligence is the
miner’s pick and shovel. Diligence is the refining fire. Once our skills are
discovered, extracted and refined, they bring value to the world around
us.
We
can create our own wealth. It is never too early, or too late, to start. There
is no telling how we may bless our world.