The Dapper Dipper on: Old and New Money
Although there is an obvious distinction between the two types of affluent in this country, I would first like to point out one thing; money is great. I’m not saying money is the source of all happiness, but if there is one thing I know, it sure as hell isn’t the root of all evil either. Money serves as the great incentive which makes this country productive. Without currency, there would be no way of knowing how much something is worth and there would be no way of rewarding those who work harder (gold star stickers might have sufficed in the eastern bloc, but this is America God Dammit). The point I’m trying to make is that we live in a capitalist society, and money turns its gears. The problem I want to address is the fact that some people don’t see a difference between net-worth and merit anymore.
First of all, let me explain that old and new money have little to do with how much you make, and a lot more to do with how you make it. Old money blue-bloods tend to have history behind their wealth. From the Rockefellers to the Vanderbilts, if you’ve heard your last name in a history book, chances are you might be from old money. Now, not all old money families are like this. You would still be considered old money if the family wealth has been passed down quite a way before reaching you.
New money, or the Nouveau Riche, refers to people who have acquired wealth within their generation. The Silicon Valley dot comers, lawyers who have taken on big cases, and those who have learned to play the stock market and win could all be considered new money. There is nothing wrong with this at all, America is all about finding opportunity to raise your socioeconomic status and I truly do not understand why new money is looked down upon by some of you readers claiming to be from old money. This isn’t India; we don’t have a caste system.
Where I am from, the new money in the state tends to stay toward South Beach so they can flaunt, while the old money families settle down in the historical northern half. Florida is a weird state, it’s full of GDIs and riff-raff, but it is a prime example of why new money used to be a bad word. Flaunting is arrogance; it misrepresents the wealthy as people who look down on society instead of those who have worked hard to earn their spot within it.
However, lately I’ve noticed that a lot of people who claim to be “old money” are the ones who have been preaching their superiority complexes to the open forums of this website. If that doesn’t reek of GDI, I don’t know what else could. The whole allure of being from old money is that you don’t talk about it, it’s something that you’ve grown up with and it is understood that wealth is nothing to brag about. Furthermore, if you brag about coming into an inheritance or the prospect of one day running the family business, I will undoubtedly consider you less of a man. Stop living under Daddy’s coat-tails. It’s one thing to perpetuate the success of your family fortune through hard work at the company; it’s another to brag about work you have never done yourself. The new money may not have a lineage, but if they are modest about their earnings then they are damn sure better than a trust fund baby who mooches off grandpa’s dime. Quit ruining your family’s good name and get to work.
I know this seems like a rant, but when it comes down to it maybe some of you kids need a good ranting. It goes against the entire greek culture to believe you are better than someone because of how much money you make. Merit is the name of the game here, brothers, and I will hold a man who makes a modest living in higher regard than the son of a bitch who makes more money than God if the modest man isn’t a showboat. What happened to judging a man by his actions? Did all of you forget that along the way to the fucking clubhouse bar? Money should never be held as a character trait. New or old, if you talk about your money, you’re doing it wrong.
Maybe this is a little to serious for TFM but within my own family and the families of my peers I have noticed that the succession of money has slowed to the next generation due to the current tax systems and longer life expectancies. My Great Grandparents and Great Great Grandparents all died in their early 50’s and therefore passed on the entirety of their accumulated wealth to the next generation. Currently while their are trust funds in place and monetary support in place, my parents generation have yet to receive the complete inheritances that grandparents and generations before them received as my grandparents are still going strong into their 70’s.
This change in the succession of family wealth and responsibility has led to what I see as a large deficit in maturity in the baby boomer generation. I respect my grandparents and the generations before them a lot more because the family businesses and wealth were in their hands shortly after finishing university which seemed to be closely followed by the death of their parents. The baby boomer generation have been able to ride the coat tails of their parents success in many cases for their entire lives and some continue to do so.
Besides the life expectancy diluting inheritance, increased estate taxes are also cutting away from the wealth that can be passed along, this all leads to from what I have observed, new money having far more liquid capital while old money has their money spread amongst several generations and in businesses, property and other forms of physical capital.
People say that old money doesn’t show off but I think if you give your head a shake and look at your grandparents homes, summer homes and other properties along with other properties that have been in the family for more than a few generations, you can see that old money used to spend just as extravagantly in the past as new money does currently but now that this physical capital is in place, it makes little sense to replace it.
All in all, the class difference comes from a difference in upbringing, while old money families are generally raised within the upper class and are therefore imparted with the associated mannerisms, new money is often raised within the middle class and therefore lack the upper class mannerisms. But while they may be equal assets wise I believe that new money is far more liquid, which is why you see large differences in consumption between the two groups.
13 years ago at 12:10 pmCool story bro.
13 years ago at 2:57 pm^ $20 says this guy didn’t even read that comment……….neither did I.
13 years ago at 3:47 pmAll old money was once new money.
13 years ago at 12:11 pm^This
13 years ago at 6:12 pmMoney is the scoreboard of life
13 years ago at 2:32 pmI think you should cash in a time out then.
13 years ago at 8:41 amThis is the best thing I’ve seen on TFM in the last couple months. Good looks, Dapper.
13 years ago at 5:34 pmShutttttt Uppppp!!! Everybody shut the hell up! Shotgun a natty. Drink some Evan and coke. Who gives a flying fuck about old/new money. Stiop talkingg about it Let’s all just fuckkin RAGGGEEE
13 years ago at 9:25 pmminus the extra letters and the evan (makers for me) fucking this^
13 years ago at 12:51 pmfucking right. rage while you can gentlemen
13 years ago at 5:23 pmLETS GO TO THE BAR!
13 years ago at 8:41 amI don’t consider any of you old money or new money until you earn it yourself, not under your parents’ wings. I’m guessing almost none of you guys have done jack shit to earn any of that money you spend. Coming from money doesn’t mean you worked hard for it.
13 years ago at 10:21 pmHit….and it’s a homerun. Nice column, DD.
13 years ago at 12:36 pmI think this article is spot on. Growing up in an affluent area in the Silicon Valley, I’ve seen some people who’s lineage is primarily middle class, sometimes lower, but have more recently come into money through dot com and high tech ventures. Going to school out west for 3 years now, I’ve started to see more ‘fratstars’ in our greek system. I don’t think the cali schools will ever frat like the south, no matter how hard they try, but I wish the ‘fratstars’ here would read this article and follow its credo and not flaunt their money like some low class stripper with lopsided double d’s.
13 years ago at 2:28 amThis was a wonderful column, I enjoyed it and it has good lessons and ideal that we should all try to uphold.
13 years ago at 4:34 amThis column was fantastic. You’re from Florida, I’m from Florida. Come find me.
13 years ago at 4:35 pm