What a wonderful thread. I have only just discovered it today, but almost everything I have thought has been eloquently put by EngineerTony. I also agree with about 90% of Jeremy Bosk.
The Undercover economist, who writes in the FT and seems a smart guy to me points out that we need to make a certain amount for ourselves, even though the Chinese can do it cheaper and better. If we don’t we don’t have anything to trade with. EngineerTony gives many well-chosen analogies to illustrate the financial industry but I would sum up by describing it as the ‘middle man’ enabling industries that do something useful to function. But we can’t function as a society with only middlemen.
We all are agreed we are stuck with democracy. The difficulty is that is that we need large numbers of people, the electorate, to make good choices. And the trouble with that is that people, generally are rather fallible.
As a member of the human race I have noted the strength of peer pressure and the effectiveness of words, rather than facts or logical thought. Finally people, quite naturally respond to self-interest, or, if you prefer, greed.
So we have to design our society to cope with these characteristics, not become enraged when people behave as could be predicted. I agree that solutions are not easy. But we should at least identify the problem, then set about solving it.
It seems to me totally obvious, for instance, that the financial industry pays itself far too much, and that top people generally are paid too much, and it keeps getting worse. Obviously people benefiting from this situation aren’t going to agree, so let’s not even ask them. I also agree that it is very difficult for shareholders to be effective, for simple administrative reasons.
What’s wrong with the UK?
If I wasn’t British (English) I certainly wouldn’t like us. We are bigoted to an amazing degree. Our opinions are about 90% predictable from our backgrounds. We don’t like change, foreigners, argument, and engineers. We think we are better than foreigners, and yet in my experience almost the only thing we are quite good at is humour. And our approach to problems is not solving them but to blame someone. Also we are very reluctant to take a long-term view of anything. What do we have against arguing? I don’t mean exchanging insults. I mean courteous respectful exchange of differing opinions. We still have expertise at a certain technical level. That’s why we are good at motor racing, but in my lifetime top management has been disgraceful. Everyone is scornful of politicians, yet they come from ‘us’ and are elected by ‘us’. It seems to me that it must be extraordinarily difficult to be a politician in this country. You have to have a squeaky clean past, because the media will be sniffing about for any dirt, however irrelevant. You have to make a good persuasive speech, be careful not to say something you might regret 10 years later, and figure out how to run the country. When you are in opposition you have to make promises and commitments to get elected, then when you get into power and find out the realities of government you are called every name under the sun for departing from your original intentions. A big problem in the UK is the media, particularly the press. But we keep buying the popular newspapers. I don’t. I subscribe to the FT on the internet, get the Washington Post for free on the internet, and get TV news mostly from Aljazeera