Random conversation generated in chat. Yes, I really do have these sorts of thoughts. Whether I should share them more or less I dunno.
<CmdrKing> Y'know, I really am crazy. I keep having this recurring idea that a great way to improve economic health would be to abolish the stock market as part of a plot to put an end to corporate profits. The core idea is to put into place laws requiring profits at a corporate level be distributed to employees therein.
<Kotono> Uh...
<CmdrKing> This obviously ignores that the logistics of such a thing are completely impossible.
<CmdrKing> The fascinating part is whether it could even theoretically do any good. It's certainly novel at least.
<Hal-work> Not really, what are you going to do to replace investment capital?
<Hal-work> The point of the stock market is to get money from investors so you can improve the business.
<CmdrKing> (It's logistically impossible because in order to do it you'd have to require companies to buy back their publically traded stock, and basically no one can afford THAT.)
<Aya> Enforcement of profit distribution is also a ridiculous notion on concept unless you're going to regulate every last thing, and it's not really capitalism anymore if you do.
<CmdrKing> Yeah, that's definitely one of the issues I hit in thinking this out. Choking out the expansion opportunities afforded by IPOs and so forth isn't really desirable.
<Hal-work> True enough, that's more socialism than anything.
<CmdrKing> Yeah, I suppose so.
<CmdrKing> Like I said, it's basically a thought exercise. One I'm pretty sure requires being crazy to actually formulate.
* Smashy (Smashnuke@h68.35.31.71.dynamic.ip.windstream.net) has joined #rpgdl
<CmdrKing> I did have this idea about basically allowing corporations to issue bonds to alleviate the investment capital issue, though it's less efficent in more ways than I probably know I'm sure.
<Aya> It is socialism.
<Aya> You are basically describing it as though the government ran and regulated everything.
<Aya> I mean that's a valid model of thought but it's not exactly a "cure all" to be applied to the current system.
<CmdrKing> Certainly the origin of this line of thinking is pretty pure-blooded socialist. It's struck me that capitalism isn't working quite right, because money has this way of just circling around the top stagnant rather than really circulating through the system. Maybe I'm wrong. I'm certainly not an expert.
* Nitori (~TechU@NCheu0741.ResNet.Dal.Ca) Quit (Ping timeout)
<Aya> I think trickle down theory is a load of bull, sure, but I don't think complete socialism is the road to salvation either. <_<
<Aya> Money definitely does concentrate in the land of a top few percent. Works like that pretty much anywhere in the world.
<CmdrKing> Well no. Government isn't competent enough for that.
<Aya> Even if government was competent enough for that, people won't be.
<CmdrKing> I'm not sure I see your distinction there.
<Aya> One of the biggest issues about socialism is getting everyone to buy into the concept of "for the greater good" and working equally hard, which is just a pipe dream.
<Aya> Even if government was 100% non-corrupt and did all the regulations right...
<Aya> It would not necessarily mean the system would work.
<CmdrKing> Ah. Yeeaaah, equal profit sharing, just to call back where we started, would be a bad idea for that reason. By the same token a more advanced system creates just that much more potential for inefficency, corruption, etc etc.
<Aya> Yeah, you're assuming an ideal meritology-based system which would be practically impossible to scale properly.
<Aya> Taking the best of both capitalism and socialism, as it were, which would assume flawless human judgment.
<Soppy-Ladykiller> I just wish there was more of a focus on long-term or sustainable profits rather than higher short term gains
<Aya> Japanese companies do it. >_>
<Aya> But the thing is, here, a company shows a loss on their quarterly report and the CEO gets thrown out to the streets.
<Aya> So it's not entirely corporations' fault - the mentality of a lot of stockholders is an issue too.
<Aya> People expect easy money when they have lots of money.
<Soppy-Ladykiller> Not always, but yeah.
<CmdrKing> Of course, going back to pure-blooded capitalism, it seems like more companies might realize that stuff like profit sharing, higher wages, and the like are for multiple reasons ultimately in their best interest. More motivated workers, higher buying power in the workforce, and ultimately more people buying more stuff.
<Aya> I exaggerrate, but you get at the picture I'm painting.
<CmdrKing> But no. Ah well.
<Aya> Yeah, you just eventually run into the problem that people are corrupt.
<AAA> I have an idea
<AAA> Why don't we just make being poor illegal
<AAA> Problem solved
<Soppy-Ladykiller> I think it's less corrupt and more greedy
<CmdrKing> I'd consider greed a form of corruption.
<Soppy-Ladykiller> Not always, but they do often walk hand in hand
<CmdrKing> Oh yeah. That whole "duty to the stockholders" bit, and the short-term mercenary mentality it breeds, was one of the other factors into that whole train of thought. No matter how you want to solve things, you really have to purge that sort of thinking.
<Aya> Eh, greed is such a vague term.
<Aya> Arguing it as motivation to succeed like Republicans do is a valid way to see it. There's just excess and it spills over to corruption, IMO.
* Ash|School is now known as Ashdla
<Soppy-Ladykiller> I usually draw the line between simple greed and corruption at the line between legal and illegal
<Aya> Taking a huge ass bonus and salary when your company is losing money everywhere is not illegal.
<Aya> I'd find myself hard pressed to not call it corrupt, though. Eh.
* CmdrKing sets mode: +v Smashy
<Soppy-Ladykiller> It's not a perfect system, yes
<Soppy-Ladykiller> There's also the ethical and unethical line too
<CmdrKing> Anyway, certainly greed in the simple sense of "hey, I want stuff" is a fundamental fact of human nature. It's when greed becomes a pursuit of immediate gratification that spills over into all aspects of life that we run into problems
Anyway, seemed interesting enough to share with the public so to speak. Thoughts?