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Robert_Sock
Guest
My personal opinion is that free enterprise promotes greed, and that a strong government is needed to circumvent it.
I was thinking more in line with the recent banking crisis which was supposedly caused by greed. Also the BP oil spill where greed gave way to their taking prudent precautions.Why would greed be applicable only to a free market economy? All human beings, no matter the society in which they live, are subject to greed, lust, avarice, and any other temptation.
If an employee asks for a raise, is that greed? If he seeks a higher paying job, is that greed? If he decides to go into business for himself, thinking he can earn more in that way, is that greed?
If an author sells 100,000 books, receiving royalties on each one, is it greed to try to double sales to 200,000?
If a company makes a good profit one year, is it greed to reinvest the excess profit in the business? Or is it more greedy to pay the excess to stockholders, or is it less greedy to pay all the excess to employees? Is there an ethical formula dictating how profits should be used?
Is it greed to make a 5% net profit, comparable to oil companies make, or to make a 20% net profit, which many tech companies make?
Because no government has ever been greedy?My personal opinion is that free enterprise promotes greed, and that a strong government is needed to circumvent it.
Well then, you are not speaking so much of greed as about the regulation of financial markets and oil drillers.I was thinking more in line with the recent banking crisis which was supposedly caused by greed. Also the BP oil spill where greed gave way to their taking prudent precautions.
You realize that government inspectors approved every step of the drilling process right?Also the BP oil spill where greed gave way to their taking prudent precautions.
Greed is certainly present in the free enterprise system, in the same way as it is present in non-free enterprise systems.My personal opinion is that free enterprise promotes greed, and that a strong government is needed to circumvent it.
Agree wholeheartedlyMy personal opinion is that greed is present in any system. The profit motive is a strong one and the more government can get out of the way and allow industrious, motivated people to create wealth, the better.
Government is needed to protect the environment, health and safety, infrastructure, and protecting basic human rights, for sure. But free enterprise creates more wealth and prosperity.
Do you make a point of paying a higher price for domestically produced goods?What about the greed in exploiting workers; such as large corporations having menial assembly work sent to third-world countries where the needy workers are certainly exploited?
Many would say that without those jobs, poor as they are by our standards, those people would live in extreme poverty and maybe even they or their children would starve to death.What about the greed in exploiting workers; such as large corporations having menial assembly work sent to third-world countries where the needy workers are certainly exploited?
I have nothing against large corporations sending work to third-world countries, but its the exploitation that bothers me. Pay them fairly!Do you make a point of paying a higher price for domestically produced goods?
How does one decide what if fair? For example, a friend of mine taught at a university in Africa and he was paid about $400 per month by the university. And he was the highest paid person at that university. Was he being paid fairly?I have nothing against large corporations sending work to third-world countries, but its the exploitation that bothers me. Pay them fairly!