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Just stumbled on something that really puts wealth inequality into perspective. Elon Musk's earning roughly $147 billion in a single year — that's 3.4 million times what the average American made in 2023. Let that sink in for a second.
Here's where it gets wild. The average person earns about $28.82 per hour. Musk? He's pulling in $70,673,077 per hour. Per hour. The amount he makes every second is what takes most people nearly 5.5 months of full-time work to earn. That's not even hyperbole — that's the actual math.
Think about buying a house. Average home price is around $369,000. Musk's annual income could literally buy him over 1,000 homes. Not in a lifetime. In one year. Meanwhile, most of us are stressed about saving for a down payment.
Here's another angle — you know how a dollar bill feels worthless? To Musk, $3.4 million feels the same way. It's genuinely inconsequential. That's the scale we're talking about.
The Tesla comparison is wild too. The Cyberbeast costs about $100k to start — a massive purchase for regular people. For Musk to feel that same financial sting, he'd need to spend enough to fund the entire state of Texas's budget for two straight years. That's the comparison.
Now, does he actually have $147 billion sitting in a bank account? Nope. Most of it is Tesla stock (around $130 billion worth). But that's almost worse — he can borrow against it, avoid capital gains taxes, and still have more liquidity than most of us will see in ten lifetimes.
It's not really about hating on the guy. It's just... the gap is so enormous that it breaks normal comprehension. When someone's income per second exceeds what you make in months, we're operating in a completely different economic reality.