President pointed warning about the U.S. becoming an 鈥 鈥 of tech billionaires will be illustrated at inauguration, when the world's three richest men will sit on the dais as Trump is sworn in for a second term.
, the world's wealthiest person, took an unprecedented, in the final stretch of Trump's campaign, spending some $200 million through a super PAC. Musk has a new role reshaping government in the upcoming administration and will be joined on the dais by Amazon founder . Both men's companies have enormous contracts with the federal government.
Rounding out the trio is Meta CEO , who recently his company鈥檚 priorities to align with Trump鈥檚 and has cozied up to the president-elect less than six months after Trump threatened to him.
The three men are worth nearly $1 trillion combined and will be joined at the inauguration by the chief executive officers of OpenAI and the social media platform TikTok, which is in the U.S. over the weekend under a new law that Trump opposes.
Meta, Amazon and donated to Trump鈥檚 inauguration fund.
The mega-rich have long had a prominent role in national politics, and several billionaires helped bankroll the campaign of Trump's Democratic opponent, Vice President . Biden recently gave the presidential medal of freedom to , a billionaire donor to liberal causes.
But the inaugural display highlights the unusually direct role billionaires have in the incoming administration. Biden's use of the word 鈥渙ligarchy鈥 was no accident 鈥 it's a direct reference to the form of government in Russia, whose leader Trump has long spoken warmly about. Russian President preserves the uber-rich's wealth and keeps them under control with threats.
Here's a look at the dynamics of the incoming administration and the mega-rich:
A new level of wealth
Inequality in the U.S. actually during most of Biden's term and is slightly lower than it was 10 years ago, but remains quite high historically.
Consider that the wealthiest 0.1% of Americans 鈥 about 131,000 households 鈥 owned nearly 14% of the nation鈥檚 wealth as of last fall, or more than $22 trillion in stocks, bonds, real estate and other assets, according to the most recent data from the Federal Reserve. That is up from up from 10% two decades ago.
The bottom half of the U.S. population 鈥 or about 65 million households 鈥 collectively own just 2.4% of the nation's wealth, or just under $4 trillion, according to Federal Reserve data.
A relatively new development, however, is the stratospheric levels of wealth of a handful of the country's several hundred billionaires.
Musk, for example, is worth $450 billion, according to the Bloomberg . Bezos, at $242 billion and Zuckerberg, at $212 billion, have also reached new heights. They are the only people worth more than $200 billion in the world. All but two of the top 10 wealthiest people in the world are technology moguls.
The exploding levels of affluence have led Democrats to try to revamp the U.S. tax code to target wealth. Massachusetts Sen. proposed a wealth tax during her unsuccessful 2020 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Democrats in 10 states last year unsuccessfully tried to create . Several Democratic-leaning states impose on those making more than $1 million as a way to address income inequality.
An oligarch who argues he'll disrupt oligarchy
Trump, Vice President-elect 鈥 who worked as a venture capitalist with conservative Silicon Valley billionaire, 鈥 and others in their inner circle identify themselves as men of the people, promising to wrest back power from interest groups and elites and restore it to Americans.
Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, a , has repeatedly called the U.S. government an 鈥渙ligarchy鈥 that rejects the will of the citizens for its own military and financial interests.
Trump, of course, is himself a billionaire. And part of his pitch has always been a billionaire-focused form of populism. He and his allies have argued that a vast array of intellectual elites 鈥 lawyers, executives, journalists and academics 鈥 have held back the country's lower and middle class and that rich entrepreneurs can free them.
That tension came out Thursday during the of Trump's nominee to be Secretary of the Treasury, . Vermont's Democratic Sen. noted high levels of wealth inequality in the country and the control the mega-rich have over social media.
鈥淲ould you agree with President Biden that an oligarchy is taking shape in America?鈥 Sanders asked Bessent.
The nominee replied: 鈥淭he billionaires you listed make the money themselves."
Bessent, a hedge fund manager, is one of several billionaires Trump has tapped for his Cabinet.
The Russia example
The term 鈥渙ligarch鈥 has been most associated with Russia in modern times.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, a group of businessmen took advantage of the privatizing of state industries under then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin to quickly snap up vast holdings.
They became known as 鈥渙ligarchs,鈥 and by the time Putin came to power in 2000, they had amassed both vast wealth and power while millions of ordinary Russians had struggled through turbulent economic times.
After Putin took office, he met with top oligarchs at a closed-door meeting in the Kremlin and reportedly offered a deal: Stay out of politics and your wealth won鈥檛 be touched.
Russian oligarchs who didn't end up imprisoned or dead became uber-wealthy and largely Putin's control.
The risk in the U.S.
The U.S. is a long way from Russian-style oligarchy, with a diverse, strong economy and resilient institutions. The risk is that if wealth is increasingly determined by executives' relationships with the government, it can increase inequality and lead to stagnation for most. That's the cautionary tale of Russia.
Some worry that's starting to happen in the U.S. as Trump prepares to take office. Just look at the technology sector, with which Trump spent much of his first term feuding with and vowing to retaliate against if he returned to office.
Google and Microsoft both reportedly donated $1 million to the president-elect鈥檚 inauguration fund. Zuckerberg is cohosting a reception with wealthy Republican donors next week for the inauguration, and Microsoft's chief executive officer had lunch with Trump and Vance at Trump's Florida headquarters at Mar-A-Lago this week.
And Amazon recently bought exclusive rights to a documentary about Trump鈥檚 wife, incoming first lady .
Brooke Harrington, a sociologist at who studies the world鈥檚 wealthiest people, dubbed the new wave of Trump tech supporters 鈥渂roligarchs.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to be good for democracy anywhere in the world,鈥 Harrington said of their rise, 鈥渂ecause they have essentially acquired so much wealth that they鈥檙e more powerful than the governments of individual nations.鈥
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Associated Press writers Josh Boak, Fatima Hussein, Zeke Miller, Gary Fields and Christopher Rugaber in Washington, D.C., David Lieb in Jefferson City, Missouri, Harriet Morris in Tallinn, Estonia, Matt O鈥橞rien in Providence, Rhode Island, and Michelle L. Price in New York contributed to this report.
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Nicholas Riccardi And Ali Swenson, The Associated Press