Chamath Palihapitiya, the CEO of the investment company Social Capital, told CNBC the US should let 'zombie' companies — and the billionaires and hedge funds invested in them — get 'wiped out' during the coronavirus pandemic.

More than 10 million Americans filed for unemployment in a span of two weeks, and Palihapitiya said they would be the ones hurt most by the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, not business executives.

Palihapitiya said employees wouldn't be fired if massive companies filed for bankruptcy; speculators would take the hit instead.

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Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya told CNBC that poor-performing billionaires, hedge funds, and massive companies — including airlines — deserved to be "wiped out" during the coronavirus pandemic.

During the interview, Palihapitiya, who founded venture capital firm Social Capital in 2011, said "zombie" companies run by billionaires that aren't performing well shouldn't be propped up during the public-health crisis. They should be exposed to the market forces at play, he added.

"Are you arguing to let airlines, for example, fail?" CNBC asked Palihapitiya.

"Yes," he replied.

Nearly 10 million Americans filed for unemployment in a span of two weeks. Palihapitiya said average Americans filing for unemployment would bear the brunt of the economic crisis, not billionaires, their companies, or hedge funds.

"On Main Street today, people are getting wiped out. And right now, rich CEOs are not. Boards that have horrible governance are not. Hedge funds are not. People are," Palihapitiya said. "It's happening today to individual Americans, and what we've done is disproportionately prop up and protect poor-performing CEOs' companies and boards. And you have to wash these people out."

But Palihapitiya said the employees of these companies would not be at risk if the companies went under — instead, speculators and the wealthy would take the hit.

"When a company fails, it does not fire their employees, it goes through a packaged bankruptcy," Palihapitiya said. "If anything, what happens is the people who have pensions inside those companies, the employees of these companies, end up owning more of the company."

"Just to be clear, who are we talking about? We're talking about a hedge fund that serves a bunch of billionaire family offices?" he said. "Who cares? Let them get wiped out. Who cares? They don't get to summer in the Hamptons? Who cares?"

As the economy slips into further disarray, the US has government stepped in.

The Senate passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act nearly two weeks ago to support people, businesses, and the healthcare system. And the Federal Reserve also plans to boost the economy by providing $2.3 trillion in aid, which includes loans to businesses, big and small.

But Palihapitiya, who grew up on welfare, living above a laundromat with his dad unemployed, stressed the idea that the economy would be better off if the Fed gave money to average Americans, rather than financing businesses.

"I'm not disagreeing with what the Fed has to do," Palihapitiya said. "What I'm saying is it's creating a land mine, and it's creating a bill that will have to come due."