From the Marcy Houses to chart-topping success, Jay-Z was minted the first hip-hop billionaire in 2019. Now worth $2.8 billion, according to Forbes, the star is calling out blanket hate against billionaires.
In a recent interview with GQ, the billionaire rapper said lambasting the whole billionaire class is a distraction from fixing the structural forces that lead to extreme wealth in the first place.
“It’s almost like a cop-out,” he said. “You get to demonize this group of folks without fixing the actual system that exists, that’s in play.”
The comment comes in response to a brewing distaste for the ultrawealthy across the U.S. A Pew Research survey released last week found that nearly one in five Americans, or 18%, think that being a billionaire is “morally wrong.” Among young Americans, that figure rises to about one in three. Politicians have seized on that sentiment: California has a ballot proposal for a one-time billionaire tax, and more recently, Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Ro Khanna introduced a national billionaire tax bill.
For Jay-Z, who may have 99 problems, his net worth isn’t one. He rejected the idea that being wealthy corrupts one’s character. “[Money] may enhance it or may cause you to act in a way,” he said. “But you was going to act like that anyway.”
Ditto for it having an impact on one’s ethics. “Morality is not defined by a dollar amount,” he said, before asking, “If so, what is that dollar amount? When does it start? If it’s a cutoff like, ‘All millionaires are bad.’ At $999,000, I’m good? It can’t be that way.”
The rapper is not the only star to achieve billionaire status. Jay-Z’s wife, famed singer-songwriter Beyoncé, crossed the line in December 2025. Taylor Swift, Dr. Dre, and Bruce Springsteen have also reached the ranks of the ultrawealthy.
The country now has more billionaires than ever, according to Forbes, with 989 currently claiming a net worth of 10 digits or more. Tesla CEO Elon Musk, currently worth $827 billion, is on his way to becoming the world’s first trillionaire after Tesla shareholders approved a $1 trillion pay package last year. Globally, billionaires’ wealth hit a record $18.3 trillion in 2025, according to international charity Oxfam.
From Marcy Houses to Malibu
The rapper was blunt about his own upbringing and how long it took him to reach the top. “I got successful the hard way, in spite of the way the system is set up,” he said.
Jay-Z grew up in the Marcy Houses, a public housing project ravaged by violence in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood. His upbringing was a far cry from the multimillion-dollar real estate portfolio the rapper and his wife, Beyoncé, hold today. In 2023, the duo purchased a $200 million Malibu, Calif., mansion, reportedly in cash.
He’s spoken about his upbringing before, in an interview on WHYY’s Fresh Air. “It was just [a] weird mix of emotions,” he said. “One day, your best friend could be killed. The day before you could be celebrating him getting a brand-new bike. It was just extreme highs and lows.”
Despite the chaos and uncertainty of his early years, he channeled those experiences into relentless drive. “My talent pushed against all the headwinds, and I got successful that way,” he said during the GQ interview.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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