> I'm sure that Bezos or Musk are also acutely aware of their capital
I'm not. I suspect they're paying a lot more attention to who they have working for them, their regulatory situation, particular projects....
Put it this way: when Rockefeller decided to build a new factory, his first question would've been "where's the capital coming from". When Bezos or Musk decide to build a new factory, what do you think is the first question they ask?
> There have been many projects that showed that giving poor people money with no strings attached has higher success rates than anything else. Also your advice of getting loans or credit cards is quite unrealistic and shows you the cost of being poor. The loans that a poor person will get are essentially so expensive that the only thing they do is making them poorer.
I wasn't giving advice. But I think your studies are taking a naïve approach - that kind of program inherently selects for the kind of person who gets access to that kind of program, which is immensely class-loaded.
I'm not. I suspect they're paying a lot more attention to who they have working for them, their regulatory situation, particular projects....
Put it this way: when Rockefeller decided to build a new factory, his first question would've been "where's the capital coming from". When Bezos or Musk decide to build a new factory, what do you think is the first question they ask?
> There have been many projects that showed that giving poor people money with no strings attached has higher success rates than anything else. Also your advice of getting loans or credit cards is quite unrealistic and shows you the cost of being poor. The loans that a poor person will get are essentially so expensive that the only thing they do is making them poorer.
I wasn't giving advice. But I think your studies are taking a naïve approach - that kind of program inherently selects for the kind of person who gets access to that kind of program, which is immensely class-loaded.