Somehow, I get the feeling that all the wealthy people think that all the problems will be short-term. It's okay if they are, but what if they aren't?
What would be amazing to me is finding out that rich people don't stockpile food and 'stuff', when it would be so easy for them.
Sue
You bring up a complex question that doesn't have a simple answer.
I would fall into the category of what many of you would call wealthy. I own retreats/homes/property in Kentucky, Florida, Idaho, and Mexico. I have a sailboat moored on the gulf coast and can leave the country uninhibited anytime I need to. All are fully stocked with supplies and not just food. Am I prepared? Not even close.
My opinion is that people with a lot of money don't really think of stockpiling as prepping, it's just easier to buy in bulk. There are at least 20 cases of soft drinks in my pantry but not for "prepping". It's more for parties and convenience. I also own a lot of ammo, but a day at the range with my friends will burn up a couple cases so why not have a few on hand all the time. I'm not stockpiling ammo, I just have a ton of it around for recreation and it's easier to buy by the case. If TSHF tomorrow, I would be better off than most, and I have plenty of precious metals to buy my way out of a situation but I'm still not as prepared as someone who is on a full-time working farm (but I'm getting there). So, to answer the question, yes the rich stockpile stuff but they do it for entirely different reasons than you might think. Do they believe that only short term problems are ahead? Yes, for the most part. But some, like me, realize that we are heading towards the total collapse of the US Dollar and are preparing for that eventuality in earnest.
On the other hand, where I think most wealthy people are lacking is in the networking relationships necessary to confront TSTHF. For instance, when I was a dirt poor college student living in the student ghetto, I needed a Volkswagen transmission but couldn't afford it. All I had to trade was a waterbed. I found someone with a transmission but they only wanted cans of house paint or cash in trade. So, I found someone to trade my waterbed for several cans of house paint and I got a transmission - all in the space of a couple of days.
Now the rich folks might be able to broker a deal for a million dollar oceanfront condo, but there is no way in hell they have the contacts or wherewithal to trade a waterbed for a transmission amongst a bunch of get-it-done poor folks and they sure as heck don't know how to install a transmission. That will be the undoing of the upper class in a SHTF situation because money can't buy relationships or blue collar skills.
The other factor that you may not know about is that most wealthy people are only wealthy on paper. They don't have tons of cash in the bank for the most part. They own property, or stocks, or whatever and don't get a paycheck every week. Therefore, they have to have cash flow. That's their paycheck. It comes from dividends, or rents, or royalties and the cash flow
is critical. Most rich folks will be completely wiped out because their cash flow will dry up and they will have to start selling assets to get cash, which will not be worth much in a SHTF environment and that's how they get wiped out - in an instant. All they will have is relationships and blue collar skills to fall back and well they aren't very strong in those areas.
In my opinion, small scale farmers who grow a diverse range of garden crops, feed crops, and tend livestock and have their farm in a remote rural area near a small community of 2,000 to 5,000 people and have separated themselves as much as possible from the banking system (read: no debt) will be the true winners in the upcoming turmoil. Notice I didn't say anything about whether said farmer is wealthy or not.