A Return To Stability
Close to 3000 movers and shakers took to the world stage  in Switzerland last week (01.25-29) for the annual World  Economic Forum, commonly referred to as Davos. This  year’s theme was The Great Transformation, Shaping New  Models. And while there was much discussion on new  models, most looked a lot like the model that emerged  from the Great Depression and served America well for  two generations. That would be the model we dismantled  in the 1980s and 1990s. 
As the doings began at Davos, Bloomberg released their  Global Poll of more than 1.200 investors, analysts and  traders who shared their thinking on the state of the  economy. Surprising numbers; more than half agree with  the Occupy Wall Street movement that income inequality  harms the economy, harms growth. Seven in ten believe  the banks have too much control over government. Two-thirds of the respondents think governments should  pursue policies to tackle that issue.
A participant on the opening panel at Davos, Sharan  Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade  Union Confederation said, “If you’ve got a group that is  too big to fail, what it means is that you are the biggest  bullies on the planet. The financial sector has lost its  moral compass.” More than 80% of the respondents to the  Bloomberg study think banks need to be regulated so  they’re not too big to fail.
About two-thirds see at least some truth in the argument  that bankers’ actions are driven by greed and harm the  economy. This is in line with studies showing that when  executive pay scales escalate too far above the average  employee in their company, it takes focus off what’s best  for the company and moves it to what’s best for those at  the top. When bankers start focusing on their pay, they  forget their role in the community. They forget they are  there to protect the funds the members of the community  entrust to them. They forget that they are there to find  local businesses that need loans to grow. They forget that  they are there to help people in their community finance  their homes. 
When it comes to the investment bankers on Wall Street,  they get so focused on their paychecks that they forget  they are there to help create capital. Instead they are busy  devising ways to play high-stakes gambling games, all the  while setting up their customers to take the fall if the  bank’s bet goes south. Moral compass? There’s none to be  found. While most business people and small businesses  are striving to do the right thing every day, the Wall Street  types have the morals of an alley cat. 

 
 




 
 
 
 




 
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