Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Diamond Greed - Sweet Caroline
The recent Libor fixing scandal in the City of London just claimed its largest victim yet; the Barclays' CEO Bob Diamond. The scandal raises a wider question about the morality of greed...
The BBC coverage quoted two contrasting emails from members of the public:
C Abbott in Leeds emails: "It's a disgrace how the media and politicians are persecuting Bob Diamond and Marcus Agius for doing their jobs. We all live in a capitalist society where CEOs and chairmen are employed to make profits for their shareholders. If these regulations allow the rate fixing then the heads of Barclays and the other 20 banks under investigation are not to blame. The FSA and the politicians who set the rules and regulations should be held accountable. Instead of this self-righteous drivel that Cameron and Miliband are delivering to the public."
Neil Mcintosh in Worthing emails: "The right decision and about time. Too much mud has now stuck and all under his watch to allow him to stay and maintain the confidence of the market, shareholders and customers. Greed is not good and now it is being dealt with as it should have been since 2007. Now we need successful prosecutions with long prison terms and deterrent penalties such as seizure of profits made from such activities or all of this will have been for nothing. That in my view is the only acceptable course of action."
In other words:
Anything that legally makes profits for shareholders is justified.
or
Greed is not good.
How do you view greed? Is there such a thing as responsible capitalism? Is greed a virtue? If you were a banker, would you have fixed Libor? If you had the power, would you regulate in order to restrict human greed?
Recommended listening:
Sweet Caroline by Neil Diamond
Labels:
banks,
dishonesty,
fairness,
greed,
Libor,
regulation
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