Hidden Brain - Filthy Rich
Episode Date: February 20, 2018Several years ago, sociologist Brooke Harrington decided to explore the secret lives of billionaires. As she told us in this favorite episode from 2016, what she found shocked her. ...
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Have you ever wondered what it's like to be rich?
Taking all of her for detox in the Hamptons,
standardized testing has really stressed him out.
Really rich?
Why are you wearing a tux?
It's after sex, what am I, a farmer?
Private jet to your island estate in the Caribbean, rich?
I mean, it's one banana, Michael. What could it cost?
$10?
Most of us will never know what that's like.
But if you have ever been at least a little curious about the lives of the Uber wealthy,
this show from October 2016 is for you.
It's an interview with Brook Harrington, a sociologist at the Copenhagen Business School
in Denmark.
Several years ago, Brook decided to explore the secret lives of
billionaires. Her strategy become a wealth manager. Brook discovered that in
order to manage money for the super rich, wealth managers learn a lot about the
private lives of their clients and the very different set of rules that govern
their world. The lives of the richest people in the world are so different from those of the rest of us.
It's almost literally unimaginable.
The laws are nothing to them. They might as well not exist.
Brooke Harrington, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me on the show.
For wealth managers to do their job, I understand that they need to find out everything about
a client's life, not just a client's financial life, but everything about their life.
Give me some examples of the kind of conversations people have with wealth managers and the kind
of issues they bring up about their personal circumstances that might affect how their
wealth is managed.
Well, it usually starts with what's called know your client activity.
So if you were to come to me with me acting as the wealth manager, I would first ask to
see some proof of identity like your passport.
And then we would talk about what goals you had for your wealth.
And that begins the series of increasingly delicate
and increasingly intrusive questions.
Then usually we get into whatever real reason
is bringing you to me.
Maybe you want to avoid your taxes.
Maybe you really don't like your family.
That's surprisingly common among wealthy people. For example, if you have a relative or if you
yourself are engaging in some activity that might get you extorted, it may not be
illegal but it might be socially shameful. That's a financial risk that your
wealth manager needs to know about. If you have a son or daughter with a drug
problem, that's a financial risk that your wealth manager needs to know about.
There can also be issues like, I think I'm headed for a divorce, but I don't want my spouse to get half my assets.
How do I hide those assets, preferably offshore, so that whatever is legally provable as mine is such a small amount that it's not worth fighting about. So it's really interesting because these professionals in some ways get to know their clients better
than the clients own family or friends or even their own spouse.
Yes, it's apparently something of a cliche in the offshore world that the average client
is a man in his 50s with a secret family somewhere.
Might be a gay lover, might be a common law wife
and some children, but they're usually all sorts of secrets
that these wealthy folks wish to keep hidden
and that they have the additional privilege
of being able to hire people to take care of in secret.
So I understand you conducted about 65 interviews
in 18 countries for this book.
Tell me a little bit about the people you met.
To be a wealth manager, you have to understand finance and the law, but this kind of wrote
also calls for a certain psychological makeup.
What kind of person becomes a wealth manager?
Well, several of the people I spoke to describe themselves in only somewhat joking terms as
social workers for the rich. So you have to have empathy and a desire to help people,
but also a very high tolerance for people who would otherwise seem to be so
extremely privileged that you might be otherwise inclined to smack them around
and say snap out of it.
You're lucky.
You write in your book about the extreme lengths that some managers go to please their clients
or to provide services to their clients.
You write about a manager named Alan Orin Geneva who said that one of her clients once called
her from outside a restaurant in London.
Tell me that story.
So this is one of the first stories that I heard that really made my eyebrows raise, while I was
training to be a wealth manager, Eleanor told this story over lunch of receiving a phone
call from a client who was in another country saying, I've just lost my bracelet outside
of a restaurant, helped me find it.
And the client didn't identify the restaurant by name.
So imagine having someone call you from another country.
I mean, obviously the country was identified,
but not anything remotely approaching a location.
So you have to sort of marvel at the immaturity
of the client expecting someone else
to help her fix a problem like this,
but Eleanor somehow did it.
She determined where the client was and what exactly had been lost and
got the local authorities on the case, found the bracelet, and build the client for all the time,
and apparently the client was happy to pay. There are sometimes clients do make requests like this,
not because they are acting childish, but because they actually have an ulterior motive.
They actually want to test the loyalty or ability of the wealth manager.
You tell the story of a wealth manager in Hong Kong named David.
Yes, he got a call early on in his relationship with the client in which the client said that
he was in Japan and he was meeting with a Japanese gentleman who had expressed a desire
for smoked salmon and that this client had promised him
I think a thousand sides of smoked salmon straight from the factory in Scotland and was now calling David saying get me the salmon
And David said well, I'm your wealth manager not your fishmonger and the client said well today you're the fishmonger
and so David happens to know someone who knew
the head of the Smokesammon factory in Scotland
and he fulfilled the client's wish.
And the client later told him,
I basically made up that story.
I wasn't sitting across from a Japanese fellow
who wanted a thousand sides of Smokesammon.
I just needed to see that you had the connections
and the will to do what I wanted,
when I wanted and not ask any questions.
It was almost a test of his ability to jump
and sort of perform this outlandish request,
perhaps as a guide to sort of other requests
that would come further down the road.
Exactly, and also it was a test of
of what kind of powerful social connections
this wealth manager might
have.
Because one of the wealth manager's roles is to set up private markets for deals.
So it's not uncommon for them to have several clients, each of whom owns incredibly valuable
real estate, art collections, yachts, and so forth.
And since these clients are very, very concerned about maintaining their privacy, they don't
want to list these things on the open market for sale. If they need to raise cash, they want to do the sales as quietly,
as discreetly as possible, with as little public recording as possible.
One thing that I got from your book is that there are important ways in which the very rich are
very much like the rest of us and ways in which they are not. So wealthy people, unsurprisingly, turn out to have troubled marriages and wayward children,
just like everybody else.
But wealth, you argue, can compound those challenges.
Well, apparently it's not uncommon for the wealth manager to be asked to find or recommend
rehab facilities for kids.
Or a parent will ask a wealth manager to break some bad
news to the next generation to his or her own children.
Sometimes the wealth manager has to broker a truce between feuding family members.
So one family member feels that they've been done by unfairly in the inheritance plan
and has to be somehow brought back in so that they don't sue the family.
The big risk here is if you have a disgruntled family member who sews,
the lawsuit process in many countries makes public many, many private documents
that would reveal the extent and nature of a family's wealth,
all of which have been carefully guarded secrets.
families' wealth, all of which have been carefully guarded secrets.
When we come back, I'm going to talk to Brooke about how the rich lead very different lives than you and I. They don't just eat differently and travel differently and live
in bigger homes. They sometimes play by an entirely different set of rules.
Stay with us.
My guest today is a sociologist Brooke Harrington.
She spent years trying to understand the lives of people who are so wealthy that they're
able to circumvent the constraints of national laws and borders.
In the course of her many interviews with
wealth managers, Brooke talked to one professional in Switzerland who told her a revealing story.
So, this wealth manager and her boss had been summons to a country outside of Europe by
a client who was sending a private plane for them. She showed up at the Zurich airport
with her boss waiting for this plane, and she discovered
that she'd left her passport back home in a different purse.
And she said to her boss, I've got to go home and get my passport because we're leaving
Europe.
And he said, don't worry about it.
And she said again, no, they're going to check my passport.
They won't let me leave Switzerland, much less enter another country.
I've got to go home.
And he said, no, really, don't worry about it.
So she didn't say anything further, figuring, you know, it would be his problem if she got
refused the right to leave.
Sure enough, the private plane pulls up, they get on it, nobody checks the passport.
It lands in this other country outside Europe, nobody checks the passport, they get into
the private car sent by the client, they're taken to the client's home, they have their
meeting, private car takes them back to the private plane sent by the client. They're taken to the client's home. They have their meeting
Private car takes them back to the private plane private plane flies them back to Switzerland
They get off the plane and go home at no point has anyone encountered passport control or customs agent and
This wealth managers comment was the lives of the the richest people in the world are so different from those of the rest of us.
It's almost literally unimaginable.
National borders are nothing to them. They might as well not exist.
The laws are nothing to them. They might as well not exist.
It's potentially very, very dangerous. And I think she's right about that.
You spoke with the wealth manager named Dieter, I think this was a German
wealth manager who talked about how his job allowed him to shmooze with
powerful people, but also in some ways discovered things about foreign
countries before even the citizens of those countries would find out about
those important things. Yeah, he was very proud of the fact that when he was
working in Africa, he would have
parties and the heads of state of the various countries he lived in would come to his house
and he'd get them drunk and they'd be spilling state secrets by two in the morning.
And then people like Catherine Graham, the late publisher of the Washington Post, would
call him up for advice.
And, you know, he could speak authoritatively about at least affairs in some African countries,
because he'd heard it directly from the mouths of the people
who made those policies.
It reminds me a little bit about what
we learned when the Panama Papers scandal broke.
I kept seeing photos or drawings of the faces of people
whose names turned up in the Panama Papers.
And it was really a rogue's gallery of people
from all walks of life, as well as heads of state and corporate leaders.
People who you would think have nothing in common with each other, but at one level, the
fact that they are so rich gives them these very important things in common, which is to
say, for them, national boundaries and laws are all optional.
Taxes are optional.
All forms of law are essentially optional at that level of wealth.
So, this has come up recently in the U.S. presidential election, when Donald Trump suggested
that not paying federal taxes or avoiding federal taxes legally, I might add,
for several years, made him actually someone who was smart.
He didn't pay any federal income tax.
So if he's paid zero, that means zero.
As you tell me about these very rich people drawn from different walks of life who have
this thing in common, the fact they're very wealthy, talk a little bit about their attitude
toward taxes and their attitude and obligations
in some ways to footing the common bill. Some of them actually do sound a lot like
Donald Trump. When I heard Donald Trump say that not paying taxes made him smart and that
if he had paid his taxes, they would have been wasted anyways. I was like, yep, he's the
voice of a lot of very wealthy people around the world and and their wealth managers who said essentially the same thing to me. They
they're very committed to neoliberal ideology and very committed to the idea that these elite
clients are doing the world a favor as as wealth, and that their initiative should be protected against the
government and what they regard as theft by taxation, by incompetent governments that would
just waste any money they collected anyways.
They also, by the way, regard redistribution of collected tax as immoral, because it creates
dependency on the part of the poor.
So I'm fascinated because what you're saying is that in effect the wealthy and their tax managers
don't just think they're doing something that's practical and expedient.
You're saying they actually feel like they're doing the moral thing?
There is a very strong component of ideology here.
And you see this in the wealth management training program.
You see it among at least about a quarter of the people I interviewed really seem to
believe quite unironically in the justice of protecting the wealth of their clients from
taxation.
They literally view taxation as theft and they view government in general as being incompetent
at best, corrupt at worst,
and they're deeply suspicious of any sort of welfare state programs because they see it as destroying initiative.
So the picture you've painted for me broke of the wealth manager,
someone who is a loyal person, an honest person, a resourceful person, trustworthy,
and I fully imagine that lots of wealthy people
are probably very good people, high-minded people. But I want to talk for a moment about the professionals
whose clients are very clearly, you know, sleaze bags. How do you as a wealth manager
serve the interests of someone who is cheating his country on taxes, cheating on his wife,
cheating his employees,
how do you serve a client like that and then go home, tell yourself that you're a good person
and sleep well at night? Well, some of them don't, and I think that's one of the reasons why we're
seeing a wave of leaks recently, that some people are so troubled by what they're seeing that
they just can't stomach it any longer, and they blow the whistle, often with dire personal consequences.
About a quarter of the people I interviewed, I would characterize as being conscious stricken
about the larger impacts of their work.
And they had a range of strategies to reconcile themselves, to the implications of that for
their own conscience.
One of the ways that they dealt with it was to encourage their clients to donate to charity,
to offset the negative impact of depriving the state of revenues.
Other people I interviewed, including one gentleman in Panama City, said he would actually
lecture his clients on the work of a Marus N and Joseph Stiglitz, basically
on the theory and practice of inequality in the world.
And he would point out to them that as they sat in his office in Panama City a couple
miles away, people were living in cardboard shacks and had no access to clean drinking
water.
And what did the client think about that?
Now, that may seem mild, but it's a fairly risky strategy to pursue with wealthy people
who are used to having people fawn over them and not challenge them.
And frankly, most wealth managers are replaceable.
There aren't a lot of them in the world, but if you find one a little too in your face,
you could always go get another one or get another one within a different company.
I think a lot of people have impressions of the lives of the very wealthy and imagine what life must be like when you're jetting around in a private plane and being waited on by service staff all the time.
And I'm wondering in your conversations with wealth managers, whether any of your own assumptions or beliefs
about the connections between wealth and happiness were either confirmed or challenged?
I was struck by a man I spoke to in the Channel Islands who talked about how suspicious
wealthy people are. It jibed with some things that I've seen personally. And what he said was,
when you're really wealthy, it's not uncommon to have the experience
that everyone is out to get a piece of you.
It's like what happens to a lot of re-winners,
all sorts of so-called relatives come out of the woodwork,
asking for loans, asking for help of some sort,
con artists come out of the woodwork,
look into get a piece of you.
But that's what happens throughout the lifetime
of wealthy people. And so it breeds a kind of you. But that's what happens throughout the lifetime of wealthy people.
And so it breeds a kind of suspicion.
Why do you want to be my friend?
Why are you being nice to me?
Are you just trying to get me to give you something?
And that must be very unpleasant.
And you can see how that would lead at the extreme
to a sort of Howard Husey and retreat
or isolation from people.
Because if you can't trust anyone, why bother? I mean the sad thing that you're saying is that the wealth manager might end up
being perhaps among the very few people that a rich person can trust.
Yeah, I think that seems to be a common story. It's wealthy people and their
servants. It almost comes to the point where you can, if you're a wealthy person,
you are more trusting of the people you pay
to be in your service than the people you don't pay
because with your family, you might have sort of
a kinglier problem, which of my children actually
loves me and which are out to get something from me.
But at least when you are having a transactional
relationship with an employee, at least the boundaries there
are clear.
You're paying them for certain services and you can assess whether they are giving you
those services at the standard you require.
If they're not, you fire them.
If they're doing a good job, you keep them on.
There's a simplicity to that that is not present in emotional relationships.
Brooke Harrington is a sociologist at the Copenhagen Business School in Denmark. She is the author of the book Capital Without Borders, Wealth Managers and the 1%.
Brooke, I want to thank you for talking with me today.
Thank you.
This week's show was produced by Maggie Penman and Parts Cha.
Our team includes Tara Boyle, Jenny Schmidt, Raina Cohen and Renee Clark.
This week our unsung hero is Michael Cullen.
Michael is one of NPR's audio engineers and the person who seems to know how to solve
every technical challenge we have.
This week he spends several hours troubleshooting our connection to the Danish studio where
Brocarrington is based.
Michael, thanks for fixing our technical woes with such a kind and calm demeanor.
We really appreciate it.
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I'm Shankar Vidantam and this is NPR.