Thursday, December 7, 2023

U.S. Anti-Trust Law: Applicable to Amazon?

In September, 2023, the Federal Trade Commission and seventeen states sued Amazon on ant-trust grounds for restraining trade and excessively raising prices on third-party sellers and consumers. Three months later, a leaked internal memo revealed Amazon’s anti-labor strategies of buying off local politicians and gaining reputational capital through well-publicized charitable work. Such work, as an anti-union strategy, demonstrates that the very expression, corporate social responsibility, is an oxymoron, or at the very least a misnomer (i.e., misnamed); a more accurate, and thus revealing, label would be corporate marketing. One effect of the “responsibility” connotation is that companies such as Amazon with mammoth market power could effectively hide strategic efforts in restraint of trade, and thus curtailing competition. Combined with feckless anti-trust prosecution, the result is an American economy that has not lived up to Adam Smith’s theory wherein competition via the price mechanism is necessary for individual self-interests to have beneficial unintended consequences systemically and thus in terms of the public good.


The full essay is at "U.S. Anti-Trust Law: Amazon."



Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Time Magazine’s Person of the Year: Taylor Swift

Time magazine named the singer Taylor Swift as its person of the year for 2023. Such a force of nature were her stadium-filled concerts during that summer that they triggered economic booms in the respective host cities. In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for example, hotel rooms went for as much as $2,500 downtown on the night of the concert. In terms of American culture, the analogy of gravity waves may fit. During an interview for television at her home (or one of her homes), Swift’s savvy business acumen was very evident; her marketing prowess was extraordinary. She even re-released her own songs, resulting in a huge financial windfall for what are really the same songs merely re-sung. It is not as if she had grown a new voice. Swift personifies American culture, whose “movers and shakers” seem “happy go lucky” on stage yet, behind the scenes, they tend to be lazar-focused on the business end. In short, considerable distance may exist between the societal image and the private business practitioner, and the ethical element can get lost in the shuffle and excitement. 


The full essay is at "Taylor Swift." 

Sunday, December 3, 2023

Wall Street

Oliver Stone’s film, Wall Street (1987) was filmed in the midst of U.S. President Reagan’s push for financial deregulation. As a MBA student at the time, I volunteered to help a professor with his paper on financial deregulation. The theory behind why the NASD (the National Association of Securities Dealers) could self-regulate its members seemed solid enough to this idealistic youngster (i.e., me); I had yet to witness human nature in the field, and over decades. Similar to Marx overlooking the human need for economic compensation as an incentive to work on a daily basis (though I overlook it too in posting free essays online), I was blind to human nature in that I did not see that the NASD itself would protect even its most sordid members so to safeguard the reputation of the profession and, even more realistically, stick up for other “members” of the “club.” The Newtonian-like automatic mechanism whereby industry self-regulation would work was too beautiful to let human nature interfere. Similarly, when I worked in public accounting, I saw the “check mark” indicating that, “as per comptroller, discrepancy resolved,” was just one of several technical points in conducting an audit. The illusion of technique as somehow objective in the business world can shield practitioners from the ethical content. In case you’re wondering how this relates to Oliver Stone’s Wall Street, the antagonist Gordon Gekko is the poster child for greed, and thus the reason why the public should not rely on industry self-regulation to police Wall Street. Bud Fox goes headlong into being Gekko’s insider-trading protégé, easily ignoring conscience personified by Lou Mannheim even though he and Bud work in the same brokerage office. In Freudian terms, the id easily defeats the superego. It’s not even a close fight.


The full essay is at "Wall Street."