The individuals and institutions cited above must all share culpability; but it is blatantly wrong and outrageously dishonest to exclude “We, the People” from the financial cesspool in which we find ourselves. Our avarice has expanded in tandem with our waistlines: we are not only what we eat but what we spend-super-size. We use our Visa Card to pay our Master Card bill, possess an average credit card debt exceeding $10,000; we have the lowest savings rates of any OECD nation; and we are too lazy or too dumb to read the fine print on any contract stuck in front of us. Is all this the fault of Wall Street and the big banks? Unfortunately, the mega-recession of 2008-2009+ has unleashed a wave of neo-populism, with a “soak the rich” rallying cry, and calls for drastically more regulation of institutions, especially banks (as opposed to better regulation or enforcing of existing regulation, both courses of action which would have avoided much of the mess we’re in).
Newtonian physics asserts that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the current drama we are living in, Sir Isaac is dead wrong: the reaction will be disproportionately huge, resulting in huge taxes on the productive sector, massive spending, and regulatory strait jackets that will impede entrepreneurism, savings, productivity and growth. Unless the American people change their attitudes, values and behavior with respect to consumption, savings and investment, and unless elected officials pull back the reins of excessive taxation and spending and avoid overregulation, a sustainable economic recovery will take far longer to kick in.
Jerry Haar is a professor of management and international business and an associate dean at FIU’s College of Business Administration. The opinions expressed in this column are the writer’s and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of either FIU or the College of Business Administration.
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