T
tafan
Guest
ha, you have got to be kidding. Have you kept up with China at all? The state started allowing capitalistic practices, private enterprise (I won’t use the term free-enterprise, because it is not that) over the last 2 decades. The country is rife with corruption of all types, a uber-rich class of people, etc.I’m new at this sort of knowledge, but relatively speaking, I believe China and Cuba have a much less of a problem with greed. The same may be said of Canada and the more socialistic Scandinavian countries.
Cuba is simply a very poor country. Its not that the people are not greedy, its that there is almost no wealth in the country. Very similar to how China and Russia were in the 1980s. When the economic controls were loosened in those two countries, greed quickly became the dominant factor in the economies. I am sure the same thing will happen to Cuba when communism goes away there.
Canada and Scandanavian: you are closer to the truth, but not quite there. In the Scandanavian countries, you have economies dominated by a few very large corporations and by the government. How much greed exists, I do not know. I do know that I was in Sweden on business several years ago and a Swedish collegue explained to me that they could not get young people to fill up their universities. He had a masters in engineering and he pointed to the waiter and said the difference in their life style was he could own a car: but that was about it. Hence kids were too lazy to go to university. That I think is greed in a different form: I am owed a living by the government, I do not have to work for it.
Canada: if you look at what some of the huge petroleum companies are doing there, you would have to think greed is alive and well.
The best you can say about those two countries is if you give people enough of a social security net, they won’t be as greedy: but I am even skeptical about that. They certainly have their ultra-wealthy class, but it is mainly old-money. They simply have removed (through tax system) the hope of many people moving up to the upper-class.