Elusive Wapati finds an epic rant on why
Millennials are smart to slack off:
And then we have the Wall Street scams. Corzine didn't go to jail and
neither has anyone else. Nor are the hospital administrators who billed
out those charges for services never performed, or any of the other
corporate interests that are always looking for a way not to make an
honest profit but rather to rip you off wholesale.
These aren't little rip-offs either; those plague every society and it
never ends, because there are dishonest people in the world everywhere.
No, these are big
robberies that ought to be felonies everywhere and always, yet today
they never are. Go ahead, try to start a business or get ahead, but the
dice roll on one or more of these *******s getting their claws into you
and destroying everything you built, and your inability to obtain
justice if they do, makes the deal rather less attractive than it used
to be.
There's an old game: The Two Things. You have to boil down everything about a particular thing into two characteristics. It is a nice focusing exercise. The Two Things about economics are:
- Incentives count.
- There's no such thing as a free lunch.
Both of the links above examine aspects of these two points. Recommended.
I agree with the rant. The winners in business are the ones who don't care about honesty. See:
ReplyDeleteTrillion Dollar Bank Bailout
Multi- billion Dollar Auto Manufacturer Bailout
Trillions in Medicare fraud not prosecuted
Government rules and licensing schemes set up to lock out the little guy. Remember, Abraham Lincoln became a lawyer by passing the Bar without finishing grade school. You can't even TAKE the bar without a 6-figure law degree.
We need to revive Letters Of Marque for such piracy, so that industrious people are incentivized to go after Corzine et.al.
ReplyDeletePersonally I like tar and feathers... And a rail...
ReplyDeleteI guess that kid who spent all that money getting a PhD and now can't find a job isn't so bad off after all.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link and the mention! And yes, that was a fabulous article by the ever-excellent Denninger.
ReplyDeleteWhen old people slack off they call it "Going Galt," but apparently younguns aren't allowed to do it without being called lazy, even if they're doing it for the same reasons.
ReplyDeleteYep, Denninger.
ReplyDelete