| HappySqurriel said:
On top of that, it isn't difficult to ensure that corporations are responsible for all externalities they produce, and the board of directors are accountable for all laws broken by the corporation, and to follow through with this. In most cases it is pretty straightforward to calculate the cost of reversing the harm caused by coporations, and appropriate penalties can be assessed by a court of law. If a corporation trys to buy influence from a judge or elected official the board of directors should be charged with a crime and should go to jail. It doesn't take that many companies going bankrupt from being short sighted, that man companies seeing multi-billion dollar penalties for being irresponsible, or that many boards going to jail for breaking the law to get the vast majority of corporations to act responsibly |
But that only applies if you get deemed "Too Big To Fail," which is a risk in and of itself. Lehman Brothers and Behr Sterns weren't Too Big, even if AIG was. The risk of complete annihilation outweighs the chance of a bailout, and plus if you find yourself having to get bailed out, are investors really going to look kindly on you in the future?

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.







