Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

May 19, 2009

The Fallacy of Laissez-faire Capitalism

Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Gr...

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I think the whole concept of Laissez-faire Capitalism is based on at least one false premise. Alan Greenspan in October 2008 pretty much described the problem to the House Oversight Committee:


Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders' equity are in a state of shocked disbelief.

People will indeed act in self-interest. The assumption was the a well run company
would function in it's self-interest. However, the system was hijacked by a worship of CEOs. Filling their pockets with unimaginable funds gave them an illusion of being all knowing, and ultimately believing that their own self-interest was best. They surrounded themselves with Board members they controlled. The "dictatorship" of the shareholders suffered a coup at the hands of the CEOs.


This fallacy of mutual self-interest extends to the original corporate design. The interest of the collective share-holders was not the same as the the interests of the company, and certainly not the community.


The values of capitalism need a rework. Self-interest can not be the driver of the market. The value of stewardship of the community's interest needs to be incorporated at a fundamental, ie regulation, level. 


As we see in the mortgage scandal, the consumer can't possibly understand the market well enough to protect his own interests. Only the government can be in "loco parentis".

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