Re: CEO vs Neurosurgeon
Nothing is perfect, and anything can be fine tuned to make it better.
The market can be described in another way - the wisdom of crowds. Your fine tuning amounts to the wisdom of Obama or the wisdom of RiverDad. Pick someone - whatever wisdom they have is going to be rejected by someone else, but unlike with the wisdom of crowds this person's wisdom is going to be shoved down the throats of anyone without them having a say about it.
If the market was perfect, then scammers would never be able to perpetuate their scams.
If our legal system was perfect, then no crimes would be committed and go unsolved. Our legal system is not perfect. Crime are committed and remain unsolved. Does this mean that the legal system can be improved by instituting a Judge Dredd program where the cops become cop, prosecutor, judge and executioner? That will certainly solve some problems but how about the people who are opposed to that concentration of power. Our legal system is like a marketplace in that it distributes power through many channels, a Judge Dredd program concentrates it all onto one person and if he makes a wrong call then everyone is screwed.
If the market was perfect, then people like G. Richard “Rick” Wagoner Jr. would never have received huge pay raises and bonuses for running GM into the ground, year after year after year.
A mother loves her children. She has a soft heart. She loves her children so much that she hates to see them be upset. They want to eat candy for dinner every night. She loves them so much that she serves them candy every night. They have heart attacks and die as obese whales at the age of 20.
No one is questioning that the mother loved her children, what's at issue is how she expressed her love.
Market success is not synonymous with "making the right decisions." People who lose their shirts are an integral part of a functioning market. People make the wrong calls all the time. Some people think a mother's love is expressed by serving candy for dinner, others believe that a mother's love is best expressed by serving a balanced meal to children. Both sides are showing love, but only one side is the winner.
If the market was perfect, then money managers would never be paid millions of dollars a year to run funds that have a less than index rate return.
Sure they would. You just have a fundamental misunderstanding of how markets are defined. Those money managers are paid what they're paid because people are willing to pay them rather than manage their own money via an index fund or because they're willing to gamble that this year the money manager will beat the market.
It's this simple - if you decide to pay the money manager, then the money manager is getting paid fairly.
It's basically inconceivable to me that any one human being can be thousands or millions of times more productive than the median worker.
And for other people it's inconceivable that some people don't believe in God. To them his existence is self-evident. How can someone not believe?
For other people, it's inconceivable to them that some people don't like chocolate.
Simply put, no individual is that smart, no individual can work 8,000 hours in a day, no individual is that strong or that fast. It's distortions in our markets that create the situation where some people get paid far more than they personally produce.
If Kobe Bryant or Michael Jordan can entertain 10 million people who watch a game, then they're worth more money than the best neighborhood player who can entertain 20 of his friends with his basketball prowess.
Your error is to focus on what they do - Was Jordon 20 million times a better play than a good HS player? No, he wasn't. What he was was a player who could find 20 million people who were willing to watch him play and did so because he offered them something that other players couldn't.
It's not the time put in by the player, it's how many customers are willing to be entertained by the player. That's what counts.
I believe that we should establish common sense public policies that keep these market distortions in check. We can't prevent them, but we can certainly keep them restrained within reason.
Let me guess, common sense is defined as doing things the way you want them done. It doesn't matter if I object because my objecting would be going against common sense.