Why Redistribution Alone Isn't Enough
Throughout history, capitalism has been humanity's most effective system for creating wealth. It rewards initiative, innovation, hard work, trust, and reputation — the same qualities we prize as craftsmen. Yet within its very design lies a quiet truth: capitalism has gravity.
Over time, the rewards of effort begin to orbit around capital rather than contribution.
That doesn't make capitalism evil — it makes it powerful. But any powerful system, left unchecked, will tilt toward imbalance. You can see it in property markets, global trade, and even in small businesses where monopolies and resources from big corporations slowly push out smaller players. You can also see this force in nature — like duckweed spreading rapidly across a pond until it blocks out sunlight and chokes its own ecosystem, or in the animal kingdom when a species becomes too dominant for its own good. Balance is the art of keeping things in check.
The flow of money and decision-making tends to collect at the top, while those who produce the real value — the tradesmen, the creators, the builders — often remain on the outer edges.
One of capitalism's greatest strengths lies in its capacity for decentralized decision-making — where individuals and small groups can act freely, innovate, and respond quickly to real-world needs. When this system becomes overly centralized, that strength is lost, and the creative and adaptive power that once fueled progress begins to stagnate, and decisions lose peripheral and ground-level perspective. The system get's dumber as it centralises. Rigid.
Governments use taxation and social systems to slow this gravitational pull. And in Australia, that redistribution works better than in most parts of the world. It funds healthcare, education, and opportunity — but it doesn't reverse the trend.
Over time, wealth compounds faster than wages can rise, and ownership becomes increasingly narrow. The system isn't broken; it's simply doing what it was designed to do.
Ownership Beyond a Paycheque
At Crafted Finishes, we don't believe the answer lies in dismantling capitalism — but in rebalancing ownership. Returning a sense of stake, pride, and reward to the people whose hands actually build the value.
Ownership isn't just about holding a title or a bank account. It's about belonging to something that belongs to you.
When you own a share — not just of the profits, but of the identity and reputation of your work — everything changes. Pride deepens. Decisions mature. Accountability, responsibility, and as a consequence, reward rises.
The work stops being "for someone else" and becomes a reflection of who you are. This feeling of freedom and autonomy is what many sole traders desire — and why they choose to start their own business.
That's the foundation of our profit share model. Instead of the traditional top-down structure — where owners collect and employees receive — we're experimenting with a circular model, where profits generated by the collective are shared by the collective.
Each person's contribution ripples through the business. When one project succeeds, everyone connected to that project benefits. When challenges come, we face them together — knowing the reward on the other side is shared and burdens are carried on everyones shoulders lightening the load.
We're not theorists — we're painters, plasterers, craftsmen. But we see what happens when people feel ownership: they care more, they innovate more, and they stay longer.
Trialing a New Model of the Trade
So we're putting this into practice — testing structures that let every craftsman in our team earn a genuine stake in the brand's success.
Our model is still evolving, but the principle is simple:
- •Profit share, so success is collective.
- •Autonomy, so decision-making is distributed.
- •Transparency, so trust is real.
- •Legacy, so what we build today outlives any one of us. Staked profits ensure everyone has skin in the game — a healthy balance of love and responsibility, where reward is matched by accountability and risk.
Reclaiming the Meaning of Work
For us, this isn't just about money — it's about meaning. Crafted Finishes was built on the belief that work itself is sacred; it shapes who we become. When craftsmen have ownership, the craft works back on them. The job site becomes the anvil for crafting our legacy — a place to build and shape our character and invest in our future.
Capitalism created a world of immense possibility — but the next evolution of that system will be about shared ownership, shared pride, and shared legacy.
That's the game we're playing — not to escape gravity, but to fly in formation within it. To share wealth in a way that uplifts us all without burdening any one of us — balanced, collective, and in motion together.

