Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo
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A Banking 'Leveson' ePetition
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postthe indie in form today
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Poststiglitz profile in which he calls for bankers to be jailed and politically neutered
As for jailing and politically neutering bankers found to be miscreants on a large scale, this also raises problems and questions. Firstly, only a judicial inquiry would be able to find against such individuals to the extent of being empowered to ensure that they will have been tried, convicted and sentenced (so if the inquiry does not extend beyond a mere parilamentary one, it alone will be unable to achieve such ends). Secondly, British prisons are already overcrowded, so it will be vital to ensure at the outset that the numbers of bankers to be jalied will not be so great as to tip this situation over the edge; if the bankers at the top of the tree are jalied, we're all left with those on the branches immediately below them, so how far down that tree should the axe cease to fall and who should be charged and empowered to decide this? Thirdly, you cannot "politically neuter" a banker alone, for such "political neutering" by definition requires the neutering of the relevant politicans at the same time; we've already learnt from the Leveson inquiry that one of the problems that has given rise to widely criticised activities is that too many members of a particular profession (the media in the case of Leveson and the financial services industry in the present case) have manipulated themselves into positions where they are very much hand-in-glove with politicans (and, for that matter, with the police and the judiciary), so unless those kinds of associations and their likely outcomes can first be "neutered" - i.e. destroyed permanently - any attempts to "politically neuter" bankers will inevitably be for show only rather than something that might have the remotest chance of meaningful, demonstrable and sustainable success.
Yes, of course a judicial inquiry and its outcome could be rigged, just as could a parliamentary or any other kind of inquiry, but surely that's a risk that we all have to take and which in any case cannot possibly be avoided.Last edited by ahinton; 04-07-12, 10:33.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View Post
Yes, of course a judicial inquiry abnd its outcome could be rigged, just as could a parliamentary or any other kind of inquiry, but surely that's a risk that we all have to take and which in any case cannot possibly be avoided.
Although the Leveson model has its knee-jerk critics (too long, too expensive) it seems to me that Lord Justice Leveson has run a model inquiry so far and we have learned sufficient about process to enable a decent bankers'/financial sector inc government inquiry to be run fairly soon.
I for one look forward to it
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWell we have the examples of the Hutton Inquiry which was almost certainly rigged by its tight remit and rather dim judge and its being held in court without cameras; and the Chilcot Inquiry, proceedings of which were held to a certain extent in public but the writing of which has dragged on for so long that most of us have forgotten about it; and the Butler Inquiry which was held in secret, excluded politicians, and has largely been superceded by the Chilcot Inquiry.
Although the Leveson model has its knee-jerk critics (too long, too expensive) it seems to me that Lord Justice Leveson has run a model inquiry so far and we have learned sufficient about process to enable a decent bankers'/financial sector inc government inquiry to be run fairly soon.
I for one look forward to it
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
Formidable a figure in economics as Stiglitz undoubtedly is, the article's references to the phenomenon of asymmetric information neglect to consider the unavoidable fact that, in commercial practice, most information is arguably of necessity asymmetric in its application to some degree, in that no commercial organisation (except perhaps the one-person business) shares all of its information evenly and equally among its employees at all levels and, even if it did, this would likely give rise to yet greater confusion and the risk of interference in company policy by reason of problems associated with both lack of comprehensive understanding and wilful agenda-driven misinterpretation of such information; no more can anyone reasonably expect every company employee fully to understand and agree every piece of data on current or prospective company policy than one can expect every one of the company's shareholders to do so.
If the bosses deigned to listen to opinion from below, they might learn some wisdom, most especially that they are dispensible, and that there are other ways they should seek to act out their power complexes, like, for instance, those not invoking the insecurity and compensatory greed and envy the system they "try to" control constantly reproduces at everyone else's expense?
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listening to Mr Diamond in front of the committee at the moment one recalls the superior forensic skills of Mr Jay and his learned chums ....
except that Mr George Mudie is on the bullet and has him nailedLast edited by aka Calum Da Jazbo; 04-07-12, 14:19.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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