I finally read Atlas Shrugged. It was a good read. I wanted to see how the
story came out. I liked the protagonists, but they were a little bit on the
superhuman side, like comic book heroes.
The bottom line is, the book
preaches a philosophy, and that philosophy apparently continues to have an
influence on social and political debate today, particularly amongst
libertarians, including the libertarian wing of the Republican Party.
The book makes some excellent points, but its major premise--that one's own
self-interest is the only legitimate motivation--is about 87.5 per cent
wrong, in my opinion.
Self-interest is indeed a legitimate motivation, and the author
is correct to defend it as such. But people are legitimately motivated by other
things as well. Most people would lay down their lives for their children, and
many do give their lives for their country. Policemen and firefighters risk
their lives for total strangers. We could argue about what they should be
motivated by, but the fact is that people do have various motivations, and the
mixture of motivations varies from one person to the next.
A problem
arises, in a socio-political context, with a common human motivation: to help
others. Ayn Rand, the author of Atlas Shrugged, believes this is a bogus
motivation that has been drilled into us by pernicious moral preachers over a
period of centuries. However, many people actually do want to help others, and
it is not because it has been drilled into them. It is their actual
motivation. That's just how they are.
Nevertheless, Ms. Rand correctly
points out a number of serious problems that can arise in connection with this
simple desire to help.
The human condition is complicated and often
difficult. We all need help from time to time, and some of us need more help
than others. The difficulty arises in figuring out what actually does help and
what just makes things worse.
There is also the question of the actual
motivation of some of those who say they want to help. This is an
often-overlooked factor of human motivation. It has something to do with the
"smiling faces" factor. You know that song: "smiling faces sometimes, they
don't tell the truth."
Politicians are notoriously bad on this
subject. They will say anything to get elected. Do they care about the people
who are looking to them for leadership? Some do, some don't.
There
seems to be a lot of talk lately about income inequality. It seems to be
generally assumed by everyone that it is a bad thing if some people make a lot more
money than others. Why? Is it written somewhere that everybody should make
about the same amount of money? Oh yeah: "All men are created equal." Are we
to take that to mean that everybody is literally the same as everybody else? Is
it supposed to translate into income equality as well as equality in the eyes of
the law?
Some people say that it is just basic fairness that people's
incomes should be somewhat close to each other. But who is it fair to? It
seems fair to those who have their incomes supplemented. But is it fair to
those from whom money is taken?
You say, oh well, they can afford it.
But a lot of money is also taken from people who can't afford it. And you say,
well, we should take more money from those who actually can afford it. Sounds
easy, right?
The question is, who does it help?
Are we making
the government the brokerage house of help? Do we really think that the
government is the best arbiter of who needs help and for what? Are there no
other sources of help? What about the vast network of charities that exist in
our society? What about neighbors, family, friends?
You may say, well
those things are puny compared to the vast needs.
But the point is,
first of all, no one is going to starve. Secondly, we have voted voluntarily
(though I would say misguidedly) to redistribute some of our wealth. The vast
majority of people are pretty generous. If we decided on a method of help that
cut out the government as the middle man, we could make it work.
First
of all it would be much more intelligent. Bureaucracies are notoriously stupid
and blind. The way our government distributes money is often arbitrary and
unfair. People who don't deserve money get it, and people who do deserve it
often don't get it.
How much better it could be, for example, if folks in need were helped by people in their own neighborhoods who knew them and could see
first hand whether their need was real? Come to think of it, so much help does
come in that way. Despite all the governments' largess, local resources step in
when the big shotgun in the sky misses the mark with the money it spews
out.
Secondly, how much harm does it do to the society and the economy
when we remove resources from the control of people who know how to use them and
put them into the hands of people (i.e., bureaucrats) who don't understand them and don't know how
to use them? The government certainly doesn't understand the vast resources
placed at its disposal, and it does not use them well.
Thirdly, if we
help one set of people, does it necessarily follow that in order to do that we
have to harm another group? I.e., are "the rich" a mean, greedy bunch of
oppressors from whom we need to be set free? Are they selfishly keeping too
much of their "ill-gotten" gains, and are we justified in tapping a little of
it for ourselves?
This opens up another can of worms (so to speak).
Shall we consider that a whole group of people is uniformly bad? This is an
error (unless we were talking about the mafia, prison populations or other
groups that are obviously primarily criminals).
Are all rich people
bad? Are all corporations evil? Even bankers--are they all bad? I think if you
were to go on a case by case basis, you would find that these postulates are
incorrect. Do they perform a needed social service? I think they do.
In Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand makes a very persuasive case in favor of the social
value of people who invent things and lead corporations. In political debates,
this is often short-handed to: they create jobs. They raise everybody's
standard of living.
How much more would living standards rise if such
leaders were not fettered by confiscatory income taxes, onerous regulations and
general hostility?
Of course, it is obviously true that there are some
bad apples. There is no doubt about that. The intelligent thing to do would be
to identify and appropriately punish the bad apples and let the good ones
thrive. Our current approach, on the contrary, is to assume that white-collar
crimes committed by a few are common to the whole group, and to pass laws that
are supposed to prevent the crimes form happening. However, criminals always
find ways to commit crimes; thus the whole cycle keeps repeating itself. We end
up with endless laws and regulations that excessively hamper law-abiding and honest people without doing much to prevent crime.
And of
course to prevent people from having money we can vote to take it away from
them. But as time goes by, and inflation puts us all in higher tax brackets,
eventually the vast majority of the population is being sucked dry. The
government has vast resources to dispose of, and it does a bad job of it. And
we are trillions of dollars in debt!
Friday, May 8, 2015
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Late January
The stock market is not off to a great start so far, but one month does not make a trend. The prognosticators I trust say the future looks bullish for stocks. (But of course, with stocks anything can happen.)
The declining price of crude oil continues to be a talking point in economic circles. Is it a watershed event? The US has come back from being an import-dependent nation to being once again one of the top producers of energy. Will this take power away from OPEC nations? Some of their less-stable members are certainly in for some rough going because of the low oil prices. Saudi Arabia continues to produce and export as usual, adding to the global oversupply and putting more downward pressure on prices. On the demand side, China's economy has slowed, and Europe is hovering around zero growth. Thus they use less oil, putting more downward pressure on prices.
Can the new US producers of oil who came into being in a high-oil-price environment cope with a prolonged period of lower prices? Is Saudi Arabia continuing its usual production in hopes of driving some of the new players out?
So far the story has been of US innovation, technology, private property rights, etc. We have the potential now of becoming almost energy independent. It will be interesting to see what shakes out from these changes.
A final point is that the Federal Reserve may be on the verge of letting interest rates rise again. There is usually an effect on the stock market from such a move, but it could be that it will be gradual enough that it will not be significant. However, it could be a nerve-wracking transition.
Is the economy strong enough to withstand higher interest rates? Should we take it as a good sign that the Fed thinks thinks the economy is that strong? Are we turning the corner towards "normalcy"?
The declining price of crude oil continues to be a talking point in economic circles. Is it a watershed event? The US has come back from being an import-dependent nation to being once again one of the top producers of energy. Will this take power away from OPEC nations? Some of their less-stable members are certainly in for some rough going because of the low oil prices. Saudi Arabia continues to produce and export as usual, adding to the global oversupply and putting more downward pressure on prices. On the demand side, China's economy has slowed, and Europe is hovering around zero growth. Thus they use less oil, putting more downward pressure on prices.
Can the new US producers of oil who came into being in a high-oil-price environment cope with a prolonged period of lower prices? Is Saudi Arabia continuing its usual production in hopes of driving some of the new players out?
So far the story has been of US innovation, technology, private property rights, etc. We have the potential now of becoming almost energy independent. It will be interesting to see what shakes out from these changes.
A final point is that the Federal Reserve may be on the verge of letting interest rates rise again. There is usually an effect on the stock market from such a move, but it could be that it will be gradual enough that it will not be significant. However, it could be a nerve-wracking transition.
Is the economy strong enough to withstand higher interest rates? Should we take it as a good sign that the Fed thinks thinks the economy is that strong? Are we turning the corner towards "normalcy"?
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Year End 2014
Stock Market
December is always (with very few exceptions) a good month for the stock market. Next month might not be as good (but you never know). The Federal Reserve intends to keep interest rates low. That means investors will continue to have an incentive to keep their money in stocks rather than in interest bearing accounts, for the simple reason that the dividend yield on stocks is much higher than the (practically non-existent) interest yields.
The Economy
Rising stocks usually go together with a growing economy. There are exceptions to that, too, but that is the usual rule of thumb.
Low interest rates tend to boost the economy. Business and consumer loans are cheaper, saving money for everyone. The down side is that retired people who hoped to live on interest income are getting practically nothing.
The fall in oil prices also saves money for consumers and businesses. The result should be more disposable income, which should lead to more growth.
Europe is once again a drag on the international economy. Growth rates there are hovering around zero. China's growth has slowed from its former double-digit pace. Russia's economy is on the brink of a free-fall, because it depends so much on selling oil at high prices.
The fact that the Federal Reserve is still keeping rates so low indicates that they are still concerned that our economy could relapse into recession. One wonders what their approach will be if the fall in oil prices leads to falling prices in the economy in general. They believe that falling prices indicate economic weakness. However, it is possible for the supply of commodities to rise, and manufacturing efficiency to increase, even in a growing economy, leading to declining prices. Still it is true that there is plenty of economic weakness in the world.
The continuing large Federal budget deficits and the spiraling national debt are causes for concern. Most of us have been putting off thinking about them till later on down the line. However, at some point the US economy will have to stand on its own and stop relying on deficit spending and interest rate subsidies. The fact that those things are still going on indicates that the economic disruptions of the previous decade are not actually over yet, despite the growing economy. The crisis will not really be over till the Fed's interest rate policies are back to normal and budget deficits are at least back to pre-crisis levels.
Two things need to happen for that to occur: (1) economic growth, and (2) the will to cut the deficit.
Economic growth is occurring, but it is not strong, and it suffers from various drags and hinderences, many of which arise from policies of the current administration in Washington. Of primary concern is the torrent of new red tape spewing out of various bureaucracies. Included in the regulatory orgy are attempts to regulate carbon emissions and assaults on traditional sources of energy, especially coal and oil, which are basically regarded as evil. We certainly want to find cleaner ways to fuel our economy, but probably cold-turkey is not the best way to do it.
Tax policies, also, could be better, to say the least.
There is a definite anti-business bias in the policies of the current administration. Sometimes the administration seems to show signs of recognizing some economic realities, but its political base goes crazy every time that happens.
In regard to cutting the deficit, that is a deep-seated problem. It currently seems to be divided along party lines, but we have only to look back to the Bush administration, during which there were times when Republicans controlled both Congress and the White House, to see that the pressures to overspend are very pervasive. However, we can hope that if the party that currently talks loudly about cutting the budget gets the power to do so, things will at least get a little better in that area.
All-in-all, there is hope but continued need of caution.
December is always (with very few exceptions) a good month for the stock market. Next month might not be as good (but you never know). The Federal Reserve intends to keep interest rates low. That means investors will continue to have an incentive to keep their money in stocks rather than in interest bearing accounts, for the simple reason that the dividend yield on stocks is much higher than the (practically non-existent) interest yields.
The Economy
Rising stocks usually go together with a growing economy. There are exceptions to that, too, but that is the usual rule of thumb.
Low interest rates tend to boost the economy. Business and consumer loans are cheaper, saving money for everyone. The down side is that retired people who hoped to live on interest income are getting practically nothing.
The fall in oil prices also saves money for consumers and businesses. The result should be more disposable income, which should lead to more growth.
Europe is once again a drag on the international economy. Growth rates there are hovering around zero. China's growth has slowed from its former double-digit pace. Russia's economy is on the brink of a free-fall, because it depends so much on selling oil at high prices.
The fact that the Federal Reserve is still keeping rates so low indicates that they are still concerned that our economy could relapse into recession. One wonders what their approach will be if the fall in oil prices leads to falling prices in the economy in general. They believe that falling prices indicate economic weakness. However, it is possible for the supply of commodities to rise, and manufacturing efficiency to increase, even in a growing economy, leading to declining prices. Still it is true that there is plenty of economic weakness in the world.
The continuing large Federal budget deficits and the spiraling national debt are causes for concern. Most of us have been putting off thinking about them till later on down the line. However, at some point the US economy will have to stand on its own and stop relying on deficit spending and interest rate subsidies. The fact that those things are still going on indicates that the economic disruptions of the previous decade are not actually over yet, despite the growing economy. The crisis will not really be over till the Fed's interest rate policies are back to normal and budget deficits are at least back to pre-crisis levels.
Two things need to happen for that to occur: (1) economic growth, and (2) the will to cut the deficit.
Economic growth is occurring, but it is not strong, and it suffers from various drags and hinderences, many of which arise from policies of the current administration in Washington. Of primary concern is the torrent of new red tape spewing out of various bureaucracies. Included in the regulatory orgy are attempts to regulate carbon emissions and assaults on traditional sources of energy, especially coal and oil, which are basically regarded as evil. We certainly want to find cleaner ways to fuel our economy, but probably cold-turkey is not the best way to do it.
Tax policies, also, could be better, to say the least.
There is a definite anti-business bias in the policies of the current administration. Sometimes the administration seems to show signs of recognizing some economic realities, but its political base goes crazy every time that happens.
In regard to cutting the deficit, that is a deep-seated problem. It currently seems to be divided along party lines, but we have only to look back to the Bush administration, during which there were times when Republicans controlled both Congress and the White House, to see that the pressures to overspend are very pervasive. However, we can hope that if the party that currently talks loudly about cutting the budget gets the power to do so, things will at least get a little better in that area.
All-in-all, there is hope but continued need of caution.
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Bull Session
[The following are hypothetical opinions of imaginary characters, for your amusement.]
“With
all your prating about democracy, you know full well that it is a bundle of
lies. Real democracy, full democracy,
can never work,” said Fal Ban Oh, the Chinese sophomore.
“Certainly
it can work. If the people are really
empowered, they will make the right choices,” said Charles Orson, law student
from Vermont.
“Bullsh**,”
said Sal Gregory, the business student from Ohio. “’The people.’ What a crock.”
“Oh, so
you think we’d be better off if we were run by a communist politburo?”
“It’s
working well for us,” said Oh.
“You
can’t call them communists,” said Charles.
“They’re exploiting their own people, like the capitalists did here 100
years ago.”
“So
what are you then,” Sal said, jabbing an index finger towards Charles, “the true communist?”
“No,
I’m not a communist. I believe people
should be free, and if they are they will rise to their true potential.”
“Ha!”
Sal retorted. “What a bunch of la-de-da
pie in the sky.”
“Well, it’s never really been
tried.”
“What? What have we been doing here for the past 200
years?”
“You think they’ve been free? They’ve been slaves to low-paying jobs. They haven’t had health care, and the
education they get is crap.”
“Who’s this ‘they’? The people?
The masses.”
“No, not the masses. Just regular people. Like us.”
“Hey, I’m just a regular person as
much as anybody else, but I know that if I want anything decent in life, I’ll
have to work for it.”
“F*** everybody else?”
“No. They can work, too. They’re welcome to work as much as I am.”
“Flipping burgers? Picking grapes?”
“They don’t have to settle for sh** like that.”
“Oh don’t they? You think the economy is so great, they can
just put on a tie and walk into corporate headquarters and get a $100,000 a
year job?”
Sal pressed his lips together and
blew a raspberry at him.
“I mean, the point is…” Charles
paused and regrouped. “There’s millions
of unemployed people who would love to not have to settle for flipping burgers.”
“Tell ‘em to go to North Dakota.”
“Yeah, sure. Just pack up and move to some crazy boom-town
and live in a dormitory?”
“Life ain’t always easy or fun.”
“So, f*** ‘em?”
“Ahh, bullsh**. So what are we supposed to do? Just give everybody everything, then nobody
will have to work if they don’t want to?”
“They’ll work if they can get a
decent job.”
“Why should they if they have
everything given to them?”
“Well, obviously they wouldn’t get
everything. Just enough to have a
minimum standard of living.”
“Oh, sure, and how much is
that? And who’s going to pay for
it? Me, I suppose, with sky-high taxes!”
“Well, if you’re making good money,
you could afford it.”
“Oh, yeah, and I’m working and
slaving away, and half my income goes to people who are sitting on their
asses.”
“They wouldn’t just sit there if
they could get a decent job.”
“Wanna bet?”
“You have no faith in people, do
you? Ya gotta believe they would want to
do better than a minimum standard of living.”
“Lots of people would. Not everybody.”
“Most people.”
“So that leaves only a few million,
I suppose, sitting on their asses. Just
a few billion dollars drained into their fat, lazy mouths.” Charles sat back and took a few gulps of his
beer.
“You Americans are so
closed-minded” said Oh, who had been sitting back watching the two. “You can’t see past your little political
arguments. In China we are looking
towards the future of our country. We
are part of something greater than ourselves.”
“That’s nice,” said Sal.
“You should try it, you Americans.”
“We believe in America, of course,”
said Sal. “At least I do.” He smirked and raised his beer can towards
Charles, who gave him a half-hearted sneer.
“You say you believe in
America. First of all, I don’t know how
you can, except that you don’t know any better.
You were born here, you were raised here and have been fed American
myths all your lives. You don’t
appreciate the fact that from our viewpoint and that of most of the rest of the
world, you have done terrible things.”
“Oh, and I suppose Mao tse tung and
Stalin were your favorite philanthopists,” said Sal.
Oh ignored that and went on. “And you say you believe in America, but you
are all just ‘me, me, me. What can
America do for me, and why should I do anything for it?’ Both of you. You don’t know what it means to serve a
greater cause than yourselves.”
“Hmm, the greater good, and all
that,” said Sal. “Well, you know, in
America we believe that if individuals follow what’s good for them, in the end
it turns out that it benefits America as a whole. Anyway, we are all about the
individual—rights, freedoms, etc.”
“Me, me, me,” Said Oh.
“Well, you guys have been doing
much better since you started going our way a little bit. More free markets, free trade and all that.”
“Of course. But we never stopped believing in our
country. We will always believe in it
and that everything we do is for its greater glory.”
“Everything? So people who move from the country to the
cities don’t think about finding work to feed their families?”
“Listen, let me tell you something
about all that,” said Oh. He was sitting
on the edge of a plain old wooden straight-backed chair. He took a gulp of his Amstel Light. “Whatever we do, we do for China. What we were doing before was not
working. So we are doing something
different. Our leaders were smart enough
to see that some of your cut-throat ways gave you great power. We need power. We need it to defend ourselves against
you.” He poked his finger towards
Sal. “And you, too.” He poked it at Charles, who looked offended.
They all sat there a minute
considering Oh’s comment. Oh sat back in
his chair, looking a bit uncomfortable with his outburst.
“Well,” said Charles, “it’s true we
have offended you...”
“You have no idea!” said Oh.
“Wait a minute,” said Sal. “It wasn’t us. We fought the first revolution against
colonialists.”
“Then you became just like them!”
“Listen,” said Sal. “The world would be a much more f***ed-up
place without America. We’re like George
Bailey—you know, in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life?’
What would the world be like without America? The world might be shocked if they could find that out.”
“You are right about one thing: the
world is f***ed up, and as a Chinese citizen I know that China cannot continue
to be weak. It has to become strong to
keep from being a pawn in the game. It
is a great country with a great heritage, and it deserves to be great.”
“Cool, I’ll drink to that,” said
Charles.
"Here, here,” said Sal, and drained
his can.
Friday, January 3, 2014
Some hope
Although
our current political scene is the cause of much despair for many, one can
visualize it as (hopefully) a temporary phenomenon which may improve as we
continue to recover from the financial and economic traumas of the last few
years. There is a passion on both sides
of the political debate which may be fueled in part by a fear of what the
future may hold. If the traumatic events
and the dangers continue to recede in our rear-view mirrors, the passion and
fears may subside.
On the
other hand, we cannot be so sure, and we have to be ready to defend common
sense, the rule of law, basic rights, human decency and all the things that
make us (somewhat) civilized. And let’s
do it in a civil and communicative way.
Let’s not believe rumors we may hear about how bad the other side
is. Listening to rumors is a sure road
to mayhem.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Speculation
Pressure
from shareholders seeking dividends and capital gains is a potentially
troublesome thing that seems to be at the heart of many of the difficulties
with capitalism. Shareholders want
dividends, or they want stock price appreciation, and many of them do not care
what companies’ managers have to do to deliver it. If they have to keep employees skittering
along the precipice of poverty, that’s what it takes. Many shareholders don’t even know what is
going on. They just want their dividends
and capital gains.
Of the
various ways of financing a company, selling shares of stock is not even the
most cost-effective method. It is generally more
expensive than selling bonds or simply getting a loan from a bank, especially in today's low-interest environment. It is also fraught with peril. The shares go onto markets, where they go out
of the control of the company itself. If
somebody with deep pockets wants to go on a campaign of buying up a controlling
interest in the company’s stock, he can do it.
The long history of capitalism is
littered with examples of stock being sold based on nothing but blue sky. Today, stock offerings must by law be
accompanied by endless disclosures and proofs of its reality. Nevertheless, scams are still perpetrated.
Despite
all these problems, stock is still a legitimate mode of financing. It has advantages for the company that sells
it. For example, there is no set time by
which the shareholders have to be paid back, whereas a loan or a bond must be
paid back on a specified schedule. It is
a proven way of raising lots of capital for expansion and for other purposes
(including enriching the company’s founders or its venture capitalists.)
Unfortunately,
for many people buying and owning stocks is like gambling, like the lottery,
like playing the horses. It represents
the hope of getting something for nothing—easy money. Investing in a sensible manner in the
expectation of growth and profits of a company is one thing. Investing in desperation to save oneself from
poverty is quite another thing. There
are always people around who will take advantage of someone’s desperation or
greed.
There are always a few people who can “beat the market.” They can make a lot of money by “playing”
stocks. It raises false expectations for
the rest of us whose only role in the game is to lose money at the expense of
the few winners in a speculative game.
For despite all the efforts of governments to regulate the markets,
there is always room for manipulation, for empty hype and for playing on greed
and desperation. The many become the
prey of the few who know the game. It
happens on a broad scale once in a while, but it happens on a small,
single-stock scale all the time.
The Great Depression and the recent
“Great Recession” were preceded by periods of excessive speculation. In the 1920’s, it was stocks. In the years leading up to 2007, it was real
estate. The mentality develops that
prices can only go up, never down. Until
the market proves us wrong. Whether the
speculative excesses actually were the fundamental cause of the hard times that
followed is not certain, especially in the case of the 1930’s Depression, but
they were a factor.
The
only real way to make money, in the words of the old commercial (ironically, a
commercial about investing in stocks), is the old-fashioned way: to earn
it. Once it is earned it can be invested
in assets that you hope will not become victim to speculative cycles, and you
can take precautions against that happening.
If you want to “play” the market, just be sure you play it with money
you can afford to lose.
The
assets you invest in can include stocks if the intention is to invest in the
growth and profits of individual companies.
Even then you have to beware of speculative forces and cycles, as well
as other potential mishaps that could thwart your intention and turn your
investment into a loser.
Despite
all the books and systems about investing in stocks, the best thing to do is
just do what you do to make and save money, then let a good investment advisor
invest it for you. (The trick, of
course, is finding a good investment advisor.)
And don’t expect him to make you rich; just expect him to get you a
reasonable return on your investments.
An investment advisor cannot ignor speculative patterns if they present an opportunity for profit, but they can carry considerable risk.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Gettysburg, Part II
The
phrase “all men are created equal” raises certain expectations, among them the
expectation that all people will have, eventually, about the same amount of
material possessions. Or at least that
there will not be a terrible disparity between haves and have-nots.
Unfortunately
there are all kinds of people, and there are differences among them in their
abilities to have, their abilities to handle life, their abilities to lead (or
follow) and their capacities to be in charge of things. The tendency is always for some people to
accumulate more than others.
This is
not to say that it must always be that some have things at the expense of
others. Nor does it mean that those who
have a lot of material things can’t help those who have less. It does not mean that the haves are actively
trying to prevent the have-nots from having.
There
are all kinds of people, and this also means that at the highest and lowest
levels there are good people and bad people.
It is not healthy for people to think that goodness is represented only in
their own social stratum and badness is in some other.
It is
not true that the so-called rich and powerful are trying to screw everyone
else. (Certainly not all of them!) Nevertheless it is true that some people
amongst the highest social strata are not always acting in the best interests
of people other than themselves. In
other words, there are good and bad people amongst the rich, just as there are
amongst the poor and the middle-class.
Finding
out who is good and who is bad is among the hardest things in life. The belief here is that most people are good,
and we want to trust people. The danger
we constantly face is that of trusting someone who does not deserve to be
trusted.
People
who can create or run a business are useful because they can create and
maintain jobs that enable other people to earn a living. Some people who have those jobs blame their
bosses for not being more generous with their money. They want higher pay. There is a fine balance between profitability
and generosity. The survival of a
business requires a certain amount of profitability. Pressure from many quarters puts pressure on
the bottom line, among them pressure from competitors, government regulations,
taxes and pressure from employees seeking higher pay. There is also pressure from shareholders
seeking dividends in exchange for continued and/or new investment in the
company. This last group will be the subject of our next post.
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