Bunnypigeon1 wrote: ↑Wed May 11, 2022 1:20 pm6C03B685-0A97-4EFC-856E-D07725B7A1A2.png
This debate reminds me of the cartoon i hyperlinked above- equal doesn’t always mean fair. I have 4 children and I would like to split their inheritance so as to leave them all in a good place- and that may mean not splitting it equally but yes fairly. Of course it’s more complicated than that in reality but leaving one child with a heap of money and another with much less doesn’t seem the right thing to me…. Your sister sounds very greedy and selfish. It will be a hard one to fix now as someone will always feel hard done by, much of a first world problem as it may be!
I would certainly agree with the viewpoint expressed in this cartoon.
One of my two kids is more able [in terms of raw intellectual horsepower] than the other and also has a set of softer skills that translate into success in the workplace, such as positivity, being hardworking, outgoing, etc etc.
The differences between the two of them were obvious to me even when they were both the cradle. The differences, certainly including the differences in softer skills, do not by no stretch of the imagination reflect any kind of moral superiority on the part of the more able child. They were just born that way, by pure chance. I certainly have it in my mind as a possibility that I might leave more money to the less able child.
But it depends very much on precisely how things turn out - if one of them under their own steam built a 10 out of 10 material lifestyle and the other more like a 2 out of 10, then I wouldn't hesitate to leave more to the one who was worse off. But if one was 10 out of 10 and the other 9 out of 10 I'd go with equal shares. I suppose if an equal share would be enough to push the less well off child to about a 7 or 8 out of 10 or something I'd probably still go with equal shares.
I recognise that there are people who take the opposite view, though, namely that shares should always be equal. A [very] few of these people are even themselves not in a position where they themselves would benefit from such an arrangement.