Warren Buffet is set to go into retirement at the end of 2025. Buffet for years has been the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. Greg Abel is said to be the successor to Warren Buffet's leadership. It was in 1965 that Warren Buffet took a failing textile mill and transformed it into a conglomerate. Warren Buffet owns $160 billion in Berkshire stock and at the moment the largest shareholder of the company's stock. Buffet has not intention of selling those shares. Warren Buffet has been presented to the public as a humanitarian philanthropist. This carefully crafted image from the media and public relations distorts the reality. Warren Buffet represents the obscene wealth and decadence of the upper class elite. Acts of philanthropy by Buffet are nothing more than a marketing measure. As the capitalist system continues to fail the average worker, billionaires are viewed in a more negative light. Warren Buffet attempted to soften the image of avarice with charity. Philanthropic actions do not challenge the economic system or the billionaires who control government. Warren Buffet's image as humanitarian philanthropic billionaire was created in the 2010s. Speculation over his retirement still persists. Age could be a factor seeing as Warren Buffet is 94 years old. Health and energy become concerns. Another plausible reason is that Buffet seeks retirement before a possible economic crash or recession. The world economy was damaged by Covid-19, corporate price gouging, supply chain issues, and the new set of tariffs being imposed by the United States. Growing public resentment could be making CEOs consider retirement. At the end of 2025 the Warren Buffet era of Berkshire will be over. Buffet's influence is not going away. Warren Buffet donates funds to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and his children run the Susan Thompson Buffet Foundation. Buffet could still be serving Berkshire is some capacity, just not as CEO.
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