As a young idealist in business school, I believed in the
efficient market hypothesis; an efficient market based on perfect competition
would obviate excess profits (e.g., monopoly rents) while keeping prices as low
as possible. I assisted a professor with his article on the NASD (National
Association of Securities Dealers) as a stellar example of industry
self-regulation. The ideology cutting off the far left of my peripheral vision,
I dismissed the possibility that an industry would look the other way on a
miscreant firm as executives of other companies fear accountability from the
industry association. Moreover, the business practitioners may profit, at least
in the short term, from foisting on the general public the illusion of industry
self-regulation, which can serve as a front protecting a squalid underbelly.
The full essay has been incorporated into (or swallowed up by) On the Arrogance of False Entitlement: A Nietzschean Critique of Business Ethics and Management, available in print and as an ebook at Amazon.
The full essay has been incorporated into (or swallowed up by) On the Arrogance of False Entitlement: A Nietzschean Critique of Business Ethics and Management, available in print and as an ebook at Amazon.