Response to allocation of capital post.
Is this why Elon needs $1 trillion payout?
Translated from French
It's exactly the opposite of your question. And it deserves us taking the time to demonstrate it properly.
The market is the only honest mechanism we've ever invented to identify who creates real value. Every dollar Elon has accumulated is a voluntary vote from millions of people who judged that what he offered was worth their money. Tesla, SpaceX, Starlink. No one was forced. No one voted with a gun to their head. People pulled out their wallets freely because the product solved a problem better than the alternatives.
That's what wealth created by the market is. Not theft. Not capture. Value added, measured in real time by billions of voluntary transactions.
Now, the real question. Why should someone like Elon keep wanting to earn more when he could stop, buy an island, and spend the rest of his life drinking cocktails?
Because past a certain threshold, money is no longer about consumption. It's capital. It's ammunition to execute a vision. Elon doesn't want more money to buy a twelfth villa. He wants more capital because making humanity multi-planetary is expensive. Building a constellation of 40,000 satellites is expensive. Reinventing the automotive industry is expensive. Buying Twitter to defend free speech costs 44 billion.
Every dollar he accumulates becomes a dollar he can allocate to a problem that no one else has the courage, the competence, or the means to solve.
And that's where your question reveals its fundamental flaw. You reason as if wealth were a fixed pie and his huge share deprived others. But the economy isn't a zero-sum game. Elon didn't take someone's money to build SpaceX. He created a company that divided the cost of access to orbit by 10, opening up space to thousands of players who could never have gotten there otherwise. He created Tesla, which forced the entire global automotive industry to shift to electric 20 years earlier than expected. He created Starlink, which connects entire villages in Africa and the Amazon that would never have had internet otherwise.
Elon's wealth counter isn't a selfish trophy. It's a score that measures how much value he's injected into the system.
And the mechanism that drives continuing this game is exactly what makes it healthy. The day we tell an Elon "stop, you've had enough," we kill the incentive for the next generation to try to do the same. We send the signal that beyond a certain level, your ambition will be punished. And then, we no longer have SpaceX. We no longer have Neuralink. We no longer have Starship. We have flabby bureaucracies producing PowerPoints on ecological transition while China sends taikonauts to the Moon.
Elon is the Leonardo da Vinci of our time. Except that where Leonardo had to beg for funding from Medicis to draw his flying machines, Elon built his own Medici internally. That's precisely what allows him to execute at a scale no public institution can match. Not because civil servants are incompetent, but because bureaucratic structures are mathematically incapable of absorbing the risk that an entrepreneur can take alone with his own capital.
So yes, he deserves a trillion. He deserves several trillion. As long as he keeps grinding as hard as he does, sleeping on the factory floor, pushing projects that no one else would dare fund, the market must keep rewarding him. That's the signal the system sends him to say "keep going, we need you, don't let up."
The day we find it scandalous that a man who makes humanity multi-planetary becomes immensely rich, that's when we've lost all understanding of what drives a civilization forward.
Man the Starlink doubters are hilarious in retrospect.