Around 35,000 years ago
Homo sapiens groups began to adopt a more settled lifestyle, as evidenced by cave drawings, burial sites, and decorative objects. Around this time, humans began
trading burial-site tools and developed trade networks, resulting in a
hunter-gatherer lifestyle. Those who had gathered abundant burial-site tools, weapons, baskets, and food, were considered part of the wealthy.
Adam Smith, in his seminal work
The Wealth of Nations, described wealth as "the annual produce of the land and labor of the society". This "produce" is, at its simplest, a good or service which satisfies human needs, and wants of
utility. In popular usage, wealth can be described as an abundance of items of economic
value, or the state of controlling or possessing such items, usually in the form of
money,
real estate and personal
property. A person considered wealthy, affluent, or rich is someone who has accumulated substantial wealth relative to others in their society or reference group. In economics,
net worth refers to the value of
assets owned minus the value of
liabilities owed at a point in time. Wealth can be categorized into three principal categories:
personal property, including homes or automobiles; monetary savings, such as the accumulation of past
income; and the
capital wealth of income producing assets, including
real estate,
stocks,
bonds, and
businesses. All these delineations make wealth an especially important part of
social stratification. Wealth provides some people "safety nets" of protection against unforeseen declines in their living standard in the event of emergency and can be transformed into home ownership, business ownership, or college education by its expenditure. Wealth has been defined as a collection of things limited in supply, transferable, and useful in satisfying human desires. Scarcity is a fundamental factor for wealth. When a desirable or valuable commodity (transferable good or skill) is abundantly available to everyone, the owner of the commodity will possess no potential for wealth. When a valuable or desirable commodity is in scarce supply, the owner of the commodity will possess great potential for wealth. 'Wealth' refers to some
accumulation of resources (net asset value), whether abundant or not. 'Richness' refers to an
abundance of such resources (income or flow). A wealthy person, group, or nation thus has more accumulated resources (capital) than a poor one. The opposite of wealth is destitution. The opposite of richness is
poverty. The term implies a
social contract on establishing and maintaining
ownership in relation to such items which can be invoked with little or no effort and expense on the part of the owner. The concept of wealth is relative and not only varies between societies, but varies between different sections or regions in the same society. A personal
net worth of US$10,000 in most parts of the United States would certainly not place a person among the wealthiest citizens of that locale. Such an amount would constitute an extraordinary amount of wealth in impoverished
developing countries. Concepts of wealth also vary across time. Modern labor-saving inventions and the development of the
sciences have vastly improved the
standard of living in modern societies for even the poorest of people. This comparative wealth across time is also applicable to the future; given this trend of human advancement, it is possible that the standard of living that the wealthiest enjoy today will be considered impoverished by
future generations.
Industrialization emphasized the role of technology. Many jobs were automated. Machines replaced some workers while other workers became more specialized.
Labour specialization became critical to economic success.
Physical capital, as it came to be known, consisting of both the
natural capital and the
infrastructural capital, became the focus of the
analysis of wealth.
Adam Smith saw wealth creation as the combination of materials, labour, land, and technology. The theories of
David Ricardo,
John Locke,
John Stuart Mill, in the 18th century and 19th century built on these views of wealth that we now call
classical economics.
Marxian economics (
see labor theory of value) distinguishes in the
Grundrisse between material wealth and human wealth, defining human wealth as "wealth in human relations"; land and labour were the source of all material wealth. The German cultural historian Silvio Vietta links wealth/poverty to rationality. Having a leading position in the development of rational sciences, in new technologies and in economic production leads to wealth, while the opposite can be correlated with
poverty. == Global amount ==