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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Friday, 13 January 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)46. America Isn’t a Corporation By PAUL KRUGMAN
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/13/opinion/krugman-america-isnt-a-corporation.html
And greed you mark my words will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.
Thats how the fictional Gordon Gekko finished his famous Greed is good speech in the 1987 film Wall Street. In the movie, Gekko got his comeuppance. But in real life, Gekkoism triumphed, and policy based on the notion that greed is good is a major reason why income has grown so much more rapidly for the richest 1 percent than for the middle class.
Today, however, lets focus on the rest of that sentence, which compares America to a corporation. This, too, is an idea that has been widely accepted. And its the main plank of Mitt Romneys case that he should be president: In effect, he is asserting that what we need to fix our ailing economy is someone who has been successful in business.
In so doing, he has, of course, invited close scrutiny of his business career. And it turns out that there is at least a whiff of Gordon Gekko in his time at Bain Capital, a private equity firm; he was a buyer and seller of businesses, often to the detriment of their employees, rather than someone who ran companies for the long haul. (Also, when will he release his tax returns?) Nor has he helped his credibility by making untenable claims about his role as a job creator.
But theres a deeper problem in the whole notion that what this nation needs is a successful businessman as president: America is not, in fact, a corporation. Making good economic policy isnt at all like maximizing corporate profits. And businessmen even great businessmen do not, in general, have any special insights into what it takes to achieve economic recovery...Why isnt a national economy like a corporation? For one thing, theres no simple bottom line. For another, the economy is vastly more complex than even the largest private company. Most relevant for our current situation, however, is the point that even giant corporations sell the great bulk of what they produce to other people, not to their own employees whereas even small countries sell most of what they produce to themselves, and big countries like America are overwhelmingly their own main customers...
And greed you mark my words will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.
Thats how the fictional Gordon Gekko finished his famous Greed is good speech in the 1987 film Wall Street. In the movie, Gekko got his comeuppance. But in real life, Gekkoism triumphed, and policy based on the notion that greed is good is a major reason why income has grown so much more rapidly for the richest 1 percent than for the middle class.
Today, however, lets focus on the rest of that sentence, which compares America to a corporation. This, too, is an idea that has been widely accepted. And its the main plank of Mitt Romneys case that he should be president: In effect, he is asserting that what we need to fix our ailing economy is someone who has been successful in business.
In so doing, he has, of course, invited close scrutiny of his business career. And it turns out that there is at least a whiff of Gordon Gekko in his time at Bain Capital, a private equity firm; he was a buyer and seller of businesses, often to the detriment of their employees, rather than someone who ran companies for the long haul. (Also, when will he release his tax returns?) Nor has he helped his credibility by making untenable claims about his role as a job creator.
But theres a deeper problem in the whole notion that what this nation needs is a successful businessman as president: America is not, in fact, a corporation. Making good economic policy isnt at all like maximizing corporate profits. And businessmen even great businessmen do not, in general, have any special insights into what it takes to achieve economic recovery...Why isnt a national economy like a corporation? For one thing, theres no simple bottom line. For another, the economy is vastly more complex than even the largest private company. Most relevant for our current situation, however, is the point that even giant corporations sell the great bulk of what they produce to other people, not to their own employees whereas even small countries sell most of what they produce to themselves, and big countries like America are overwhelmingly their own main customers...
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Okay, but last year an article said it seems like nobody cares about dividends anymore.
tclambert
Jan 2012
#22
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Damn, I'm old. I thought of files in terms of paper files in folders in file cabinets. Cre-eak.
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Jan 2012
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oh charlie brown would be great -- and you can never have too much charlie brown.
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