Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Who Was the Richest Person in History? (Encore)
Episode Date: February 18, 2021Jeff Bezos, the founder, and CEO of Amazon was recently named the richest person in the world. This is primarily a function of the stock he owns in the company and the company’s valuation in the sto...ck market. How would Jeff Bezos stack up against other wealthy figures from history? Are business titans of today in the same league as the famously wealthy from antiquity? Learn more about who the richest person in history was on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is an encore presentation of everything everywhere daily.
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Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon.com, was recently named the richest person in the world.
This is primarily a function of the stock he owns in the company and the company's valuation on the stock market.
How would Jeff Bezos stack up against other wealthy figures from history?
Are business titans of today in the same league as the famously wealthy from antiquity?
Learn more about who the richest person in history was on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Believe it or not, the question of who was the richest person in history is an extremely
difficult question to answer.
There are a bunch of different variables that have to be addressed even to begin to come
up with a resolution to the question.
Let's start with the current richest person in the world, Jeff Bezos.
His current net worth is around $180 to $200 billion, depending on the price of Amazon's stock.
That value is determined by some small number of shares being traded every day.
Let's say Jeff Bezos wanted to buy a $200 billion Faberge egg with cash.
Could he do it?
The answer is no, and it isn't even close.
To raise that much money in cash, he would have to sell his stock in Amazon.
He currently owns about 11% of the outstanding stock in the company.
If he were to sell his stock all at once,
simple supply and demand would cause the price of Amazon stock to play.
limit. The fact that the founder and CEO of Amazon is dumping a stock would further depress
confidence, causing the price to drop even more. I'm sure he could probably get billions or tens
of billions of dollars for his Amazon stock, but there's no way he could get the full $200 billion.
So his wealth can certainly be valued at $200 billion, but there is no way he could ever convert
that into anything close to $200 billion in the short run. Bill Gates has been selling off his shares
of Microsoft for decades. Rather than dumping everything on the market, he's been selling off
regular amounts on a regular schedule over time to diversify his holdings. This way, the markets
aren't spooked and they're not overwhelmed with shares hitting the market. And just as an aside,
if Bill Gates had never sold a share of Microsoft stock and never donated anything to charity,
his net worth would be over $700 billion today. So I bring up the topic of how you can actually measure
someone's wealth as the first challenge in answering the question of who was the richest person in history.
The next big problem is how you compare fortunes over time. One of the richest people in the world
during the Gilded Age was John D. Rockefeller. He became the first person to have a nominal net worth
over $1 billion in 1919. So how does that compare with someone like Jeff Bezos? If you just look
at the inflation-adjusted value of his fortune, it would only be $15 billion today.
Now, $15 billion is not too shabby, and it would still make him one of the richest people in the world.
However, there's more than just adjusting for inflation.
Back in 1919, his net worth was about 3% the value of the entire gross domestic product of the United States.
That much today would be around $600 billion, making him far wealthier than Jeff Bezos.
The problem with that is that the economy is much larger today, beyond just inflation or population growth.
Rockefeller made his fortune in oil, and the oil industry is a smaller part of the economy now than it was back then.
Another way to look at it would be to see how much more wealthy Rockefeller was compared to the average person.
The average annual salary in the U.S. back in 1919 was around $750, making that an inflation-adjusted $11,000 today.
However, the annual median salary today is around $56,000.
That means that Rockefeller's net worth was about $1,000.
1.3 million times the average annual salary of someone in 1919, whereas Jeff Bezos's net worth is
about 3.5 million times the average annual salary. But let's go back a bit further in time.
Rockefeller might have been the richest man in the 19th and 20th centuries, but there was
another age that had extremely rich people as well, the Renaissance. Unquestionably, the richest
person during the Renaissance was Jacob Fugger. Fugger was a German banker who created a banking
empire that spread throughout Europe. He had almost a monopoly on copper in Europe, as well as extensive
mining operations in silver and mercury. He was wealthy enough that he was the primary source of
funding for European kings who wanted to raise armies. He was so rich that he was literally known as
Fugger the rich. Trying to put an estimate on his wealth is even more difficult than it was for
Rockefeller, but most estimates I've seen would put his net worth at around 400 billion in
contemporary dollars. But we can go even further back to find contenders.
for the richest person in history. Back in ancient Rome was Marcus Licinius Crassus.
Crassus was what you would call today a real estate speculator. He would buy property at
massively discounted rates, first from the prescriptions list from the dictator Sulla, but also
from buildings that were burning in Rome. He'd make an offer for a property while it was on fire,
and then have his own private fire department put out the flames after he closed the deal.
Pliny the elder estimated his wealth to be at 200 million.
in Sesterches, which was the entire annual budget of the Roman Republic.
He met his demise in a most ironic way for the richest man in Rome.
He attempted to raise an army to invade the kingdom of Parthia, was captured, and had
molten gold poured down his throat.
If you ever wondered what inspired that scene from Game of Thrones with Viseres-Tarion,
it was Crassus.
As if that wasn't confusing enough, so far I've only talked about private citizens.
What about if somebody was a king or an absolute ruler?
of a country. If you can do anything you want with any of the resources of a country, isn't that
basically the same thing as personal wealth? The Saudi royal family has assets worth $1.4 trillion,
which are in theory spread over 15,000 princes, princesses, and members of the royal family.
However, the head of the family and of the country, King Solomon, has theoretically absolute
control over the country and the family. If he should so choose, an enormous part of that
fortune could be confiscated, and there isn't much that members of the royal family could do about it.
On a similar note, what if you were the absolute ruler of an even larger country?
At its peak, the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin had an estimated 9.6% of the world's GDP.
As the absolute ruler, there isn't much he couldn't do. There's no home or yacht he couldn't
have built. He totally controlled the economy. Anyone could have been imprisoned or executed with
their possessions confiscated. Using this approach, you could say that he had a net worth of approximately
$7 trillion inflation-injusted dollars.
Who said there was no money in communism?
India's Mughal emperor, Akbar I commanded an empire that had about a quarter of the world's
economy in the 16th century.
The value of the empire in modern terms would be over $15 trillion.
And who can forget about Jenghis Khan?
As the ruler of one of the largest empires in world history, it was basically his personal fiefdom.
Even putting economic activity aside, the land value of what he conquered would be in the
multiple trillions of dollars today. At its height, the Song Dynasty in China was responsible for
about 25 to 30 percent of the world's economic output. Emperor Shenzong ruled at the peak of the
Song Dynasty's economic power and would have given him a modern-day wealth of approximately
$20 trillion. Emperor Augustus, Rome's first emperor, not only had the entire Roman state
at his disposal, but all of Egypt was considered his personal property, and Egypt was
unquestionably the wealthiest region in the empire at the time. That would easily give him a personal
net worth into the many trillions of dollars as well. There's one final ruler I have to mention,
as he has always mentioned on the list of the wealthiest people. Manza Musa, or Musa I first of the
Mali Empire. The Mali Empire doesn't get a lot of attention in historical circles, but it was the
dominant institution in West Africa in the 13th and 14th centuries. It had little contact with Europe
due to the Sahara Desert, and likewise with the Islamic Caliphate to the east.
Musa was a devout Muslim, and decided to make the Haj to Mecca.
So he packed up his bags and set out with his entourage.
And by entourage, I mean 60,000 people.
Every member of his group wore fine silk.
He brought 16,000 slaves, and each one carried with them a gold bar that weighed 1.8 kilograms.
He had 80 camels packed with gold.
When he arrived in Egypt, he supposedly spent and gave away so much gold that he made the price of gold collapse which depressed the Egyptian economy for 10 years.
On the way back from Mecca, he passed through Egypt again and realized the problem he had caused.
He borrowed all the gold he could from locals at high interest rates just to get some of the gold out of the economy.
To be fair, some people speculate that Musa did this on purpose, to ruin Cairo as a center of the gold trade, and to move it to Gao or Timbuktu, which just coincidentally was looking.
in his empire. Much of the legend of Mansa Musa comes from the fact that he had such an ostentatious
display of wealth in a foreign country, and that so much of his wealth was in a very fungible,
liquid form, gold. Was he rich? Absolutely. Was he the richest? Impossible to say. I'll end by noting
one final problem with all the examples I've given. What can you buy with your wealth? If you lived
several hundred years ago, you could buy land, a palace, or a castle.
and lots of servants. However, you couldn't travel anywhere easily. You couldn't buy quality
medical care. Books and knowledge were extremely rare. Even the most common dwelling in the
21st century is probably more comfortable than a medieval castle was. Hundreds or thousands of
years ago, wealth could buy you armies, castles, and power, but it couldn't buy you any of the
comforts of the modern world. Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James Mackala.
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