Of course moving is expensive! That's what "high transactions cost" means. :-)
Raising inequality changes the subject. And the most misguided interpretation of all, the most pernicious to our thinking, is that
That wealth rising to the top came from somewhere.
Nay, technological advance, higher productivity, luck, lower energy prices, anything,
but it wasn't stolen. This is the classic "zero sum" fallacy. Two people voluntarily trading improve both their well being. We are most of the world, voluntarily trading with each other. World poverty has fallen dramatically.
How about those not working at all because there's a minimum wage: The minimum wage constitutes structural racism. The victims are unskilled Black teenage boys and young men. Make the wage high enough, and the unskilled will not be hired.
Health care -- the share of people covered by health insurance in the US has never been higher. Homelessness may be due to restrictive laws in favor of -- homeowners! A more encompassing explanation might be: One gets the number of homeless one pays for.
Wal-mart is probably the greatest contributor to poor people's welfare, ahead of Microsoft! Low, low prices. Otherwise they wouldn't have customers.
As I noted above, the wage share has been remarkably stable. No reason to count on anything coming out of profits.
All details aside, it's not a zero sum game. That some of us cling to zero-sum explanations of this world is likely a product of biological evolution. When we lived in bands of 40 forty thousand years ago, with no technical progress, with team production known as hunting, if somebody had more than somebody else, s/he must have stolen it! But that's not our world. It's an anachronism.