Rick Newman

The Need for Greed

By Rick Newman

Posted: October 24, 2008

This commentary first aired on the PBS program Nightly Business Report .

Maybe we should have been a little nicer to all those greedy guys who wrecked Wall Street. Because we could use some greed right about now.

Hey, I understand—we need some villains to blame for our economic mess, and they can't be us—that old comic strip still isn't funny. The rich guys who ran the profligate banks are the obvious targets. They care about making money above all else, and for that, they've been trashed by politicians and voters alike.

So now we have banks that don't want to make money. They just want to sit on the money they have and make sure they don't lose it. They're afraid to be greedy, so they're being careful instead.

I liked it better when the banks were greedy. Back then, they'd loan money to people who needed it, because they'd make a profit on the loan. They made a lot of profits, which made them eager to lend a lot of money. Some of the people who borrowed the money even used it to make their own profits, by expanding a business or buying a house. When it was the little guy getting ahead, we didn't call it greed; we called it building a better life.

It used to be nice to invest in greedy companies, too, because they earned profits and their stock went up and your retirement portfolio got bigger. We didn't want them to steal or lie, but we all understood that in the Greedy Economy, the whole point of public companies was to make money.

Now we seem to have a Nonprofit Economy. Greed is unfashionable, so we're begging banks to lend money for the good of the planet or to feel better about themselves. And big surprise, bankers don't even speak that language. When there's something in it for them, that's when they'll open for business once again. Maybe there will be something in it for the rest of us, too.

Greed is bad

Greed for companies means a focus on the next quarter's performance. Greed means the companies are less likely to invest in developing a highly trained work force, developing manufacturing facilities in the U.S. and in long-term r & d.

Our companies have had a greed mentality for the past three decades and look where it has gotten us.

Greed is bad!

Doug of CA @ Aug 17, 2009 23:56:01 PM

Your blaming the wrong people

It's not the banks or businesses (except for the criminal acts) it's the average person. Americans just have to have the next xbox, a bigger car, a bigger house and twice as much as their neighbors. Americans by and large need to LIVE WITHIN THEIR MEANS, self employed with no clue how to operate a business. Then when their overinflated use one credit card to pay another comes crashing down, suddenly now lets blame the bank the car company the mortgage company. Maybe americans should end their concept of endless, gimme, gimme, gimme. A decadent culture of over endulged, excessive abuse. Oh you just gotta have the NBA final four pay per view, oh you just gotta have that next whatever. American businesses seem to be adjusting, the american consumer is still spending like mad. Job or no job afforable or not. Which part of the constitution guaranties the right to be so irresponsible? Just because your a "free" american does not mean in any way shape or form that YOU are automatically entitled to being rich. Americans should learn the difference between NEED and WANT. One last note YES this applies to me as well.

TD of CO @ Aug 13, 2009 09:36:11 AM

Greed

Maybe there is such a thing as principled greed.

Greed is good when it is based on truth, real things not on lies. There should be non of speculative greed.

It is good to have greedy people who keep their promises, honor contracts and who own up to responsibility.

The world economy is dependent on the demands and needs of the American consumer.

The demand was fueled by inflated book values of real properties. Property values were driven up by speculative greed.

Loans were taken out on the unrealistically high book values of the properties. People and bankers began thinking that properies will pay for themselves because of the continuous boom. Never mind the capacity to pay of the borrowers.

Trouble started when property values reached the peak and started falling. Defaults started. Bankers bundled the bad loans and called them collectible assets and used them as securities to get money from investors and the government. When property values nose dived, the whole system collapsed.

Come to think of it, it is speculative greed which made the most damaged to the world economy. Speculation led to the rise of oil prices to ridiculous heights. It is good that reality set in and prices are now back to their old levels.

When oil prices collapsed speculators trained their attention to commodities. Rice, edible oil and food prices in general started rising causing hardships to the consumers in the developing world. Now with falling demand, prices are slowly going back to their year ago levels.

It is disconcerting to know that the world economy is dependent on the state of the U. S, economy. Jobs are being lost throughout Asia because of weak demand for electronic products and other exports to the U.S.

Looking back, it seems the demand for Asian goods, taking it further the health of the world economy was based on the artificial wealth created by greed of the unprincipled kind.

Might it be that the reality is the lower economic levels that we are in now or the even lower levels that we may be headed to?

I am not blaming anyone.Just preparing to accept reality. There should be less speculative greed.

J. R. Lazaro @ Jul 13, 2009 07:15:50 AM

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Rick Newman

Rick Newman

The global economy is mysterious, even scary. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman connects the dots. In addition to his writing for U.S. News, Rick is the co-author of two books: Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11, and Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

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