I won't enter into the policy discussions about wealth distribution, and you are right that the GDP per capita of the US is larger than that of Franc, but. The difference is more that of 43K vs 59K. So not 900%.
In fact, the GDP per capita is 100$ less than that of the UK, and more than that of, for example, Japan or South Korea.
Also of note may be that France, unlike the US, does not dispose of oil resources, which makes comparisons not quite as simple.
Sorry it's not 40x it's more like 10x for GDP. But there is a difference between GDP/capita and PPP. If we're talking about standard of living PPP is a good measure. But if we're just talking about "wealth" then I think GDP/capita is a better measure. Or actually, just total GDP is probably a better measure than per person.
Even at nominal GDP it is 59k vs 39k, so 50% difference and not 100%.
And I'm not sure to understand why you prefer one mesure over the other. Pure GDP does not take into account systemic issues, such as the cost of health care or education. And the point of the discussion was the relevant merit of various economical systems.
But I did not post in order to correct some semantic point. But rather to explain the non-commented down votes.
In your original post you made an extraordinary claim, that was off by an order of magnitude. I pointed this out, and instead of checking facts, you downgraded your claim, even though a simple Google lookup would have been enough to know that even that was wrong by 100%.
In my mind this is an example of why it is difficult to have meaningful debate in our society. There is no point in debating if one or both parties are not willing to challenge their understanding of the facts.
As of 2018, the US GDP is 7.34x the one of France, not 10x. And in 2019, the US population is 4.91x bigger that France population, leading to a GDP per capita being 1.50x higher, not 2x.
You cannot round numbers at 1 significant digit and use them for further computations, that's butchering math.
In fact, the GDP per capita is 100$ less than that of the UK, and more than that of, for example, Japan or South Korea.
Also of note may be that France, unlike the US, does not dispose of oil resources, which makes comparisons not quite as simple.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)...