Meet Asia’s millennial plutocrats
They are worldier and techier than their forebears
The idea that wealthy dynasties can go to pot in three generations pops up throughout history and around the world. John Dryden, an English poet who died in 1700, mused that “seldom three descents continue good.” In 19th-century America, successful families were said to go from “shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves” in that span of time. A Chinese proverb, fu bu guo san dai (wealth does not pass three generations) captures an identical sentiment.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “The millennial plutocrats”
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