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Notes -
It doesn’t matter. There’s an interesting question about why even boring, blue chip, nothing-to-do-with-tech US corporations trade at much higher multiples than similar businesses in other Western countries and in large part it’s because the entire market does, which in turn is because big tech does. The volume of wealth created in San Francisco inevitably trickles down to the rest of the country. Many people in Nebraska still have their pensions / retirement savings in the stock market, and pay even in parts of the US that aren’t booming is affected by the fact that workers can move to the parts that are and make a certain amount, driving up salaries across the board. FAANG software engineer pay really did drive up US engineering pay even for roles unrelated to big tech, which is why American programmers make 3x what their equivalents do in Western Europe even though the US is only ~50% richer. Just as several of the railroad booms in the 19th century lifted all tides, so too did what happened in tech from 2010 onward lead to huge global dollar inflows into the US economy, higher pay, higher consumption and higher growth built on rapidly rising prices for almost every asset class.
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