londonlewis
Tour Rookie
OK then if you are going to call me out. I am a retired Chief Executive Officer (MD) of a very successful Software company with many International offices that developed and sold Software Engineering solutions to many leading manufacturers throughout the World. I have a Degree in Production Engineering and an MBA from the OU, I am also a Member of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers and a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Management. So your wild stab in the dark is a little off course. I have read more books on the subject than I can remember. Still lost for words?
I am impressed with your credentials. Do you not see any inequalities in the current economic structure? Do you feel that it gives everyone a fair go at making it? And I'm not just talking about local or regional but also global?
How long do you think the current ways of working (politically, economically) will be suitable?
Current systems can't be considered acceptable surely? (And stop calling me Shirley), given the constant rising gulf between richest and poorest, unsustainable house price increases, the significant damage to the environment, personal debt levels rising to unsustainable levels that young people will struggle to ever get out from under, big business wielding so much power within the political sphere etc... the list is huge.
It seems to be that responses aimed at me are explanations of the current system, I ama aware of how business works, I just don't agree that it actually works well at all.
We are told we live in a capitalist, free market.
If I borrow more than I can afford, run up huge debts in risky business practices and default on my loans, I end up bankrupt and in court.
The banks do it and they are given a bailout. A socialist practice.
If I create money from nowhere, I am done for fraud.
If an accountant does it, he is cooking the books.
But banks are legally allowed to do this on a daily basis.
But because its legal, it must be fair.
I just don't believe that the rules in place have been put there for the benefit of the society politicians are there to represent. They are created under influence from big business that have too much to lose. How can the common man compete against the very deep pockets of a global business that makes billions in profits? They can't.