Do you think it detracts from your life that some Jeff Bezos is worth 100 billion dollars? It's not about capitalism. It's about what causes growth and who benefits from it. Signal to noise ratio, higher signals usually mean higher noise as well, but not in a very efficient system that finds ways of become more effective at increasing the signal without increasing the noise. I'm not calling workers noise, but if you're going to lump everyone in who falls outside of the 1% as the comparison, then they are the noise by default.
If the gap was closer, if Americans in general all made about the same, it would be just the .05% who were on a different playing field financially. The 1% talk is just a random number. It's really the very top, the financially elte, not the 500K a year earners, who should be looked at as using their capital power to rig a system in their favor, for centuries perhaps. I know several people who fall into the 1%.
But that's why I asked for raw numbers. Has your income doubled in the past 10 years? Has it tripled? It could have and yet you could still not be close to the 1%, but the growth % would be the same. The higher end would just get more separation from you. Imagine you make a dime, then next week you make a dollar. You just saw a 10x earning increase, however the upper echelon could see a .5% earning increase in they would be putting distance between themselves and you still.
So what's your proposed solution? How do you think the laws of supply and demand can be tweaked to make more money go to lower demand skillsets, where the workforce may be near saturation, and less money go to the owners of businesses that are super successful? Wealth redistribution? If so, how long would that last before the capitalist system collapsed since money is the incentive to create Amazon or Walmart or AT&T or Tesla?