“Whoever said ‘money can’t buy happiness’ really knew what they were talking about,” Elon Musk wrote in February on Twitter/X, the social network he bought for $44bn. He capped the statement with a sad face emoji.
Alas, Musk’s information is outdated. A 2024 study found a substantial difference in happiness between the wealthy and people who are low income. “A greater feeling of control over life can explain about 75% of the association between money and happiness,” the study’s author noted.
But there are exceptions to every rule. The world’s richest person doesn’t exactly radiate contentment, does he? Musk seems to spend every waking hour being angry on X. But perhaps he just needs a little bit more money to fix his existential angst. Perhaps, if all goes to plan, and this week’s Space X initial public offering makes Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire, he’ll finally be happy.
Of course, the big issue here isn’t what his imminent trillionaire status is going to do to Musk’s inner psyche, it’s what it’s going to do to democracy. You think Musk-the-billionaire was bad? A trillion dollars is going to afford the rocketman a whole new level of impunity and give him even more power over our lives.
It is hard to wrap your head around how big a billion is, let alone a trillion, so it’s worth pausing to really take in just how obscene this sum is. We’re talking 12 zeros; one million million dollars. If you spent $1m every single day it would take you more than 2,700 years to spend a trillion dollars.
Another way of looking at it: if you are worth $1tn, then $1m is 0.0001%, or one ten-thousandth of 1%, of your net worth. The median net worth in the US is about $192,700; $1m has the same value to a trillionaire as 19 cents has to a median-net-worth American. To a trillionaire, $100m feels like $19.27 to the median American. About the cost of a large pizza.
You can quibble with the figures above by arguing that Musk’s imminent trillion dollars is obviously not liquid and can fluctuate wildly. Musk has lost billions in a single day before. But the bottom line is this: one person has far more resources than any single individual should possess. He can buy an election in the same sort of way that you and I can buy lunch.
It’s impossible to say exactly how the 2024 election would have turned out without the $290m Musk gave to Donald Trump and other Republicans, but Musk’s millions certainly made things easier for the president. In return, the tech mogul got a very healthy return on his investment. In October 2024, Musk was worth approximately $270bn. In less than two years, his net worth has jumped by more than $500bn, and he is now poised to become a trillionaire.
Musk hasn’t just seen his net worth go up, he has imprinted his worldview on US institutions. Musk has been a sort of shadow president: attending cabinet meetings and tagged along with Trump on state visits to China and Saudi Arabia, where he has cut lucrative deals for his companies.
He had a stint running his brainchild, the “department of government efficiency” (Doge), where he slashed various government agencies, encouraged the firing of tens of thousands of employees, and made catastrophic cuts to foreign aid. The Doge-driven dismantling of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) has already caused the deaths of 600,000 people, two-thirds of them children, because of disease and malnutrition, according to some calculations. “We are now witnessing what the historian Richard Rhodes termed ‘public man-made death’,” Harvard TH Chan school of public health’s Atul Gawande wrote of those deaths. You could perhaps even call it Elon-Musk-made death.
Musk is the biggest brashest symptom of a far bigger problem: money has become inextricably intertwined with politics. Ever since the supreme court’s 2010 Citizens United decision opened the door to corporations and special interest groups being able to spend unlimited amounts of cash on elections, the ultra-rich have been funneling money into Super Pacs to influence elections. A New York Times analysis found that the share of billionaire spending in politics has gone from 0.3% in 2008 (just before Citizens United) to 19% of all contributions in federal elections in 2024, totaling more than $3bn.
That enormous sum came from 300 billionaires and their families. Just 300 people have an oversize influence on how the rest of us live – and very different priorities. A 2013 study led by researchers from Northwestern University found the ultra-wealthy are much less willing than others to invest in healthcare and education initiatives that benefit society as a whole. They want lower taxes, less government regulation – a system that keeps making them richer.
And they’ve been very successful in engineering that system. Musk may become the first trillionaire, but he won’t be the last: the rich are getting richer at staggering speed. Billionaire wealth reached historic highs last year, and wealth is now more concentrated than it was during the gilded age.
“The amount of wealth owned by the poorest half of the world is less than the amount owned by just the 12 richest billionaires,” Oxfam notes. It has forecasted that, if trends continue, there will be five trillionaires within the decade.
You don’t have to be a socialist or even a liberal to find this outrageous. No matter where you sit on the political spectrum, most people agree that the status quo is unethical and untenable.
A Data for Progress survey published last year found 70% of respondents across age and party lines agreed that “our economic system is rigged in favor of corporations and the wealthy”. A recent Politico poll similarly found that 72% of Americans say there is too much money in politics. Across parties, majorities say billionaires wield outsized influence over US politics.
And it’s not just US politics, is it? Musk, a South African immigrant to the US, hasn’t restricted his meddling to his country of residence. Musk has, for example, explored loopholes that would let him channel large sums of money into rightwing groups in the UK and has spent considerable time on X complaining about British politics. Most recently, he’s spent weeks weaponizing the horrible murder of Henry Nowak, a white teenager in England, by a Sikh man. Musk’s incessant commentary prompted Keir Starmer to accuse the billionaire of “interfering in our politics”.
Being the richest person in the world has empowered him to say and do whatever he wants, without any regard for how much collateral damage he causes. Becoming the world’s first trillionaire is only going to supercharge this sense of impunity and bring us one step closer to full-blown oligarchy.
We still have time to change this but, as we enter a new era of unelected trillionaire overlords, it is quickly running out.
-
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist and the author of Strong Female Lead

6 hours ago
6

















































