Prof / Jeremy
I do appreciate the grey areas of manufacturing and services but for this thread I need to simplify to more black and white and try to show how it looks from the point of view of a skilled engineer. We would get into an even deeper debate if we try to say which goods and which services we consider useful or are making a positive contribution to society. This is the market, a traders market where you sell to the highest bidder even if it is coloured water with caffiene and sugar added, or junk food with added hype, and then we add this to the GDP.
When I look at the financial services sector I can only see it from the point of view of a working class hard working Engineer from the north of England, with memories of the great poverty and suffering of my parents in the 1940s & 50s. Middle class Britain built their empire but it was at a high price both in the UK and in the countries that they exploited, and yes we are all living on the spoils even now.
If everyone could see the system as it is, start with the small wild west town and work along to those priviliged few who come out on top and start to exploit the rest of the community to an unreasonable degree, we would grasp economics for what it is.. I tried to show that if I swap my horse or chair for a piece of gold of equal worth that is one thing, or a piece of paper saying that my piece of paper is backed up by some gold somewhere, but now we are swapping our goods for ticks in a computer, or paper with no intrinsic value. So if I print a load of money, equivalent to a certain quantity of real wealth, say 1000 houses, then I can then effectively steal the houses without having made any contribution to their making.
These financial service providers hide amongst the complexities that they have created.
Call it insurance, they take my money with a calculated risk in their favour, pay out half to the claimants and the rest goes in luxury offices, high salaries, perks & bonuses, shareholders, and bent accountants to make sure it doesn't appear too profitable.
Call it banking, they take my money and lend it to someone else at a huge profit to themselves, juggling around with shares in other companies, building societies, investment bankers, buying and selling always with a cut for themselves. And someone on this thread said all this jiggery pokery counts towards the GDP. Perhaps if it's some foreign outfit which is being ripped off then we could see funds coming to the UK, but I can't see how it's creating wealth.
Call it taxes, income tax, capital gains, council tax. They take my money and build posh municipal buildings, spend on perks and expenses, mess up large projects because they've no experience, and in the case of MPs have a sly dip into the till with false expenses claims.
Call it stock broking. So what is a stock broker? The farmers in my wild west town could sell shares in their farms to the better off, shares which can be sold on and marketed as any product. The share value varies as the farm prospers or not. A guy building stagecoaches does well and his shares rise in value or vice versa. Alongside the market in stagecoaches is a market in shares in stagecoach builders, all buying and selling, with commission and expenses. This market is the stockmarket, buying and selling shares in companies who actually make things. This market also trades in shares in other companies who only buy and sell shares, who may buy and sell shares in banks or unit trusts or investment trusts, who hold shares in pension funds, who buy and sell shares in insurance companies………and so on forever. Each of these organizations wants a big office, a supercomputer, a string of accountants and lawyers, and layers of managers all getting a fat living. But who is making the coffee, cars, the carpets, clothes, cameras and yachts that these people are consuming?
Meanwhile the cocoa farmer has a choice, keep growing cocoa for a few pence per ton, so that Nestle can make obscene profits OR starve to death.