Jun 05, 2026
TGIF: Bravo, Bezos! In defense of business and billionaires Sheldon Richman
[I]f we ran Amazon the way New York
City runs their school system … [y]our packages would take six weeks to
arrive, we’d have to charge you a $100 delivery fee and then when the
package did finally arrive, it’d have the wrong item in it anyway. Jeff
Bezos to Andrew Ross Sorkin on
CNBC
When an American businessman defends the large
fortunes madethat is, earnedin the marketplace, it’s something to
celebrate. Jeff Bezos, the creator and head of Amazon.com, did just that
in a recent wide-ranging interview on
CNBC’s Squawk
Pod with host Andrew Ross Sorkin on May 20, 2026.
While his remarks on political philosophy did not go far enough in
defending the morality of money-making, they went farther than anything
we have heard from a businessman in quite some time, if ever. In this age
of rampant anti-rich bigotrywhen prominent politicians, darlings of much
of the old and new media, say that should not existBezos’s remarks are
refreshing indeed.
“Let’s say you start a burger joint,
and you have 10 employees. And you make a little bit of money. You have
this one outlet. And by the way, this is the most delicious burgers in
the world. People love your burgers, Andrew So then, you open a second
outlet. And now you’re making a little bit more money, and you have 20
employees. And you open a third outlet. By the time you’ve opened a
thousand outlets, you are a billionaire.…
Bezos here described not only what can happen in the
market, but also what does happen. As Bezos said, “And by the way, this
is a real-life story. It happens all the time. It’s In-N-Out Burger. It’s
Raising Cain’s Chicken.” He could have named many other
examples.
Then he went to the heart of the moral issue. If it’s okay to make money
from a few burger outlets, but something wrong with making a billion
dollars from a thousand, “[a]t what point did that money all of a sudden
become unethical? It didn’t.”
Here is Bezos, one of the richest men in the world, claiming that being
worth a billion dollars or more is not immoral when it comes from
pleasing consumers.
He elaborated:
There was one outlet. Then there were
two. Then there were three. The way to you made the billion dollars or
hundred million dollars or 10 million dollars or anything is that you
create a service that people love, and if millions of people choose your
service, you’re gonna end up with a billion dollars.”
Mind-blowing, no? This wasn’t Ludwig von Mises or Ayn
Rand or Milton Friedman defending the earning of great wealth through
production. It was a guy who actually did it. He’s proud, as he should
be. He innovated, executed his plan, benefitted hundreds of millions of
people beyond calculationand, as a result, did extraordinarily well for
himself. (Like other wealthy people, Bezos consumes only a tiny
percentage of the total value he creates.)
Why would anyone begrudge such a person the fruits of his labor? Many
motives can explain the animosity, among them, envy and sheer hatred of
achievement. To be more charitable, however, we can add “ignorance” to
the list. Some clueless people may really believe that Bezos has more
because others have less.
He took a stab at explaining this phenomenon: “A lot of people don’t
understand the zero-sum fallacy,” he said. “They think if there’s a bunch
of wealth over here, there’s a fixed pie. We’ve got one pizza, and there
are seven people and eight slices. Who’s gonna get two slices? That is
not how economies work. So it isn’t a fixed pie. It grows.”
I wish Bezos’s understanding ran a bit deeper. He’s right about the
zero-sum fallacy. Individuals value things differently. When Jones pays
Smith $5 for a hamburger, he demonstrates at that moment that he wants
the burger more than whatever else he might have bought with the $5. Vice
versa for Smith. Each gives up something he wants less for something he
wants more. But that means each makes a profit. We think of only the
money side of a transaction as reaping a profit, but that’s not really
true. A little introspection would clear up the matter.
How do we know that each side expects to profit? The trade would not
occur otherwise. Libertarian journalist and commentator John Stossel
calls this the “double thank-you” at the checkout counter. (We’re not
infallible, of course, so buyer’s and seller’s remorse is possible. Live
and learn.)
But Bezos would have been on firmer grounds had he dropped the popular
pizza analogy. No wealth pie exists. It did not mysteriously appear,
prompting the question of how to divide it. Wealth comes from human
intelligence, the transformation of matter from a less-useful form to a
more-useful form, and trade. Particular individuals engage in
identifiable actions, interactions, and transactions with their property
and labor. No disembodied process occurs. Society, as the 19th-century
French laissez-faire economist
Destutt de Tracy, emphasized, is a series of exchanges.
Ah, but is that really true? Don’t groupssometimes very large
groupscreate wealth by working together? Yes, of course. However, that
does not change the story. For one thing, one person often launches and
organizes an enterprise. Moreover, firms, partnerships, and corporations
are associations of freely cooperating individuals, each of whom chooses
to enter relationships with the others by agreement or formal
contractthat is, via transactions.
One last point on this. Bezos is surely right to emphasize that in the
market, one gets rich by furnishing consumers, directly or indirectly,
with goods and services for which they are willing and even eager to
trade money. However, he should have gone a step further to herald the
fact that the virtuous pursuit of happiness (self-interest) in a free
institutional environment necessarily promotes the “general welfare.” In
other words, as Mises and Rand never tired of pointing out, individuals
have a deep harmony of rational or “rightly understood” interests. Bezos,
like other great producers, has indeed made the world better off, but
that is not what justifies his life or his fortune. He, like you and I,
is an end in himself.
If I do my job right, the value to
society and civilization from my for-profit companies will be much, much
larger than the good that I do with my charitable giving. And I think
this is an important point to make because people forget, or they
sometimes don’t see, that when you create something like Amazon and
you’re savingI get letters from new mothers all the time that say, “I
have no idea what I’d be doing right now if I didn’t have Amazon. Thank
you.” Or what we did in the pandemic, when people could really see what
an essential service we provided to them…. Amazon creates tremendous
value. And by the way, all companies are creating value of some kind.
That’s why people are voluntarily giving them money.”