Pliny:In going over the concept of the ownership of capital I come to the conclusion that wealth will tend to pool over time. Is this a correct conclusion?
What is the ownership of capital concept? There are so many existing organizations varying from the public corporations to cooperatives. And it doesn't make sense to ask whether your conclusion is correct, when you don't provide the rationale you took to get there...
Anyway, in a services economy the marginal cost in terms of capital is extremely cheap. Many people don't realize but even in factories, the most expensive capital is human capital; engineers that can design the chips, cars or whatever you are manufacturing. From there, the raw materials and labor is way more expensive than any land and capital you need to use. Here in Portugal, in the last couple of years, two enterprises were started by guys out of college that manufacture chips and high-end automobiles. And there have been guys from poor classes, with no college degrees to show for, that organized lines to fabricate clothes and some related stuff.
When capital is a stronger component in your maginal cost, then you can go public and finance it through shares. Even very rich people won't jeopardize their wealth into their own projects. If your conclusion is true, then stockholders should have a lot of dividends to show for. That's only true for under-developed countries, where capital is a lot more needed than labor, but this are generally very risky, so few people put their money there. In developed countries, most investors are counting on gains from capital appreaciation (selling higher than they bought them), not dividends.
Equality before the law and material equality are not only different but are in conflict with each other; and we can achieve either one or the other, but not both at the same time. -- F. A. Hayek in The Constitution of Liberty