The actual consumption gap among humans is getting smaller and smaller.


For example, Jiang Nanchun, the chairman of a trillion-dollar group, lives privately like this:
His room is on a high floor with a large semi-circular floor-to-ceiling window, but the decor is very simple, with plain white walls.
My clothes are all similar, mainly from Uniqlo and H&M.
I generally find it hard to accept shirts over $299, so I think the middle class is upgrading their consumption, while people like us are experiencing a downgrade.
Occasionally, during sales that last two or three years, my wife still calls me and says, "Hey, boss, after the discount, it’s only three or four hundred yuan," and I say, "Three or four hundred yuan is acceptable."
The more refined or busy with business, the simpler their material life tends to be. This is not an isolated case but a common phenomenon.
At the same time, the more ordinary people are, the more they pursue leisure; the wealthier, the busier they are in contributing to society.
This is also a societal commonality. The gap in lifestyles creates a divide, and this lifestyle gap, in turn, influences the income gap.
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