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Most wealthy Americans achieved their affluence not by inheritance or real estate speculation but by starting and managing profitable businesses.
Most of us don't have the time, the investment capital or the experience necessary to found and run a successful business, but we can still own a piece of one through the quintessential expression of capitalism: the stock market.
With even a modest amount of money, an individual can accumulate a stake in many of the world's great businesses. And it's easy.
A click of the mouse - and a seven-dollar commission - and you're in. Another click - another seven bucks - and you're out. (Compare that to your typical real estate closing.)
And owning a piece of a company is a whole lot simpler than running one. You don't have to sign personal guarantees, hire or fire employees, grapple with an avalanche of federal mandates and regulations, pay lawyers and accountants, or even show up for work. How great is that?
Some Americans today obsess over the issue of fairness. But the stock market shines here, too. If I own shares of Microsoft, for example, my gain over the next year will be exactly the same as the nation's richest man, Bill Gates. Sure, he may own a few more shares than I do, but our percentage returns will be the same.