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Patrick Trepanier's avatar

Great article on how focusing solely on financial efficiencies is one of the reasons our economy is broken. A couple of related items I'd add to Frank's thesis here are the short-term-itis of Corporate America and the financialization of the American economy.

In addition to min-maxing and putting every financial metric on a spreadsheet, modern Corporate Executives no longer live in a long-term planning/investment mindset - they are infected by short-term-itis. Wall Street quarterly earnings partially force executives to "manage their financials" to meet short-term earnings reports that are usually more focus on stock-buybacks, CEO-options targetets/etc and less focused on long-term planning for a company's success. Same goes for the constant drumbeat of layoffs, outsourcing, mergers & acquisitions, constant exec turnaround that Frank mentions, etc.. Having worked in Corporate America for 30+ years I saw these trends get worse and worse - execs could not care less about their employees or their customers because they have short-term blinders on.

I got an MBA back in the day where we studied legendary Management professor Peter Drucker. Drucker used to say "if you take care of your employees, they will take care of your customers." It's really that simple. Unfortunately most of the brokenness of our current hyper-capitalist economy is due to CEOs who have little regard for their customers and even less regard or interest in their employees. The Costco hot-dog example Frank brings up is instructive; Costco has so many more examples of their excellent business model - they actually pay their employees well and take care of them with good benefits (which is why so many Costco employees' name badges show "Employee since 2004, 2010, etc-show me another retailer with that kind of employee tenure!).

Sorry long post but Frank is spot on here- we need to reform hyper-capitalism and bring back capitalism.

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William's avatar

I think this idea plays out very much even in highly personal decisions. The recent issue with CompSci grads not being able to get jobs, for example. Lots of people ran to CS (who really had no business in CS) because the math said “CS degree = good job after graduation”. Many of these newly unemployed graduates would have been unironically better served with middling degrees in business or at least something they’re passionate in.

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