Eduardo Saverin
Source of wealth: Facebook
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Modules
Biography
Eduardo Saverin cofounded Meta Platforms, formerly Facebook, with Harvard classmate Mark Zuckerberg in 2004.
Now a venture capitalist, he still derives most of his wealth from his small but valuable stake in Meta.
In 2015, he launched venture fund B Capital, with BCG and Bain Capital veteran Raj Ganguly. The fund has more than $7 billion in assets under management.
In 2022, B Capital raised $250 million to invest in early stage startups.
A Brazilian native, Saverin has been a Singapore resident and renounced his U.S. citizenship ahead of Facebook's 2012 IPO.
Financial Assets
The Great Lie of Mega-Fortunes: The Case of Eduardo Saverin
Billionaires are often presented under the romantic myth of the 'self-made person': a narrative designed to justify opulence as the natural reward for hard work, effort, or ingenuity. However, when confronting such extreme volumes of wealth with macroeconomic reality, the meritocracy narrative completely breaks down. No individual can legitimately generate through personal effort a fortune equivalent to millions of times the average working-class salary. Capital at the top does not grow because of exceptional talent; it expands through an implacable dynamic where accumulated money works exponentially faster than people, devouring the wealth generated by productive labor.
The immense fortune of Eduardo Saverin, linked to Technology and 'Facebook', has not been built in a free-market vacuum, but through rent-seeking, the use of exclusive elite influence, the consolidation of monopoly positions, or inherited wealth. Far from taking real private risks, billionaire empires structurally depend on state support through direct subsidies, infrastructure use, exploitation of R&D, public contracts, and offshore tax engineering. While this wealth is equivalent to the physical weight of 231 tons of pure gold, the rest of the planet suffers from an artificial scarcity of basic resources. The fact that this wealth is enough to fully fund the public health system of DR Congo, a country with more than 105800000 million inhabitants for 15.2 years, proves that unlimited accumulation is not an entrepreneurial achievement, but the hijacking of democratic sovereignty.