turgy22
Nothing Special
I'm not sure if I'm completely understanding you on this one.I completely disagree with you on financial reform, turgy. Markets work because greed is mitigated by risk. The financial "reform" was "necessary" because the government decided that risk needed to be removed from the equation. With market forces in effect, if you get greedy, you take the chance that someone is going to be able to provide the same service for less. In the stock market and banks, if you get greedy, you risk things taking a turn and losing everything. When the government decides that they are going to bail you out, then the risk is removed from the equation and there is nothing to mitigate the risk. If you truely want to reform the financial market, then get the government and the government "guarentees" out of the equation.
First of all, I am most definitely AGAINST government bailouts of private business. But, to the best of my knowledge, none of the businesses that engaged in the risky behavior leading up to the recession knew they'd be receiving a government bailout if their risks caused them total losses. So, I don't think it's accurate to say that government removed the risk. The risks were taken before the bailouts and the only reason for the bailouts was because (at least according to the experts) without the bailouts, the entire country's financial system would have collapsed. If this is true, I view the bailouts as a necessary evil, but one that needs to be prevented from happening in the future. In order to do that, you must limit the size and scope of these businesses so that if they do fail, they don't take down the whole country with them. I think that's the idea behind the financial reform.
I do see one way in which risk has been removed from the equation with a lot of this financial stuff, though. A lot of the people in charge of these situations receive ridiculous compensation to make these risky decisions. If they succeed, they get huge bonuses. If they fail, they get fired and receive a huge bonus. Where's the incentive to make intelligent decisions that will lead to long-term growth if you get richer faster by playing the high-risk game? Even linking CEO compensation to stock price doesn't work because executives come in, make hasty short-term decisions to boost the stock immediately and get a huge bonus and then bail out at no loss once the numbers come back to earth.