russ_watters said:
The dictionary definition is just fine: "All goods and resources having value in terms of exchange or use"
Wikipedia has a more involved discussion on wealth. There are many different interpretations of the word so it's not a trivial question.
Value in terms of exchange
or use does imply that wealth depends on the intrinsic value of goods.
Maybe you need to define "intrinsic value" - I mean, if the market says gold is worth $350 today and $325 tomorrow, what is its "intrinsic value" - and more importantly, is that relevant?
I would say that no matter its price, gold has no intrinsic value, and only has exchange value.
Intrinsic value is a term you introduced to this discussion to describe my argument. The term I originally used was "useful value"; for example, the useful value of a bicycle is that you can ride it places much faster than walking and often faster than a car, it does not require gas to function, and it's good exercise. "Useful value" is what I have been meaning by "intrinsic value." It's not easy to quantify but it does generally increase over time.
When you say that someone is "wealthy" what it ultimately means is that they have access to goods that have useful value. A wealthy person can buy a car, eat well, own a house. The important things are the car, the food, and the house; they exist as real things that have real value. The money the wealthy person uses to buy the car, the food, and the house does not have real value and are only a measure of his relative
power in his society. Say fifty dogs are fighting over 100 bones. The bones represent the real, useful wealth, the things like cars and houses. The strength and size of each dog represents the buying power of the dog. Making some of the dogs stronger does not increase the available wealth; only increasing the number of bones does that. And in as much as you can say that the strength of one of the dogs is "valuable," you mean that it indirectly represents some of the bones; that it can be used to obtain those bones.
Now, what if some of the bones contain poison but smell very good (call these "cigarette" bones). Does the presence of the cigarette bones increase the total wealth of the group of dogs? The bones are certainly worth "buying power" because dogs are willing to pay for them with flesh and blood, but the dogs are not any better off by the presence of the poisoned bones. Is it reasonable to say that the dogs are wealthier for them?
The distinction must be made between the creation of wealth and the mere transfer of wealth. If people pay money for double whoppers, and the shareholders of Burger King therefore obtain more money, all that has happened is a transfer of wealth. The people buying double whoppers have wasted their money by buying things that lack much real value or are harmful, so their buying power decreases without gaining anything in return. The shareholders' buying power increases. The process doesn't "create wealth" for the shareholders; it robs wealth from the customers and transfers it to the shareholders.
Money and stocks, in the absence of any increase in real useful value of goods that they can be traded for,
are a zero-sum game. Only the useful, real value of goods matters in terms of wealth. In the real world the total useful value of goods usually does increase but this is not a result of stock trading.
My example was stocks. Stocks are not cash and their market value fluctuates.
The market value of dollars fluctuates too. There is not much essential difference between dollars and stocks--the fluctuation is only a matter of degree.