Technology
This is the official technology community of Lemmy.ml for all news related to creation and use of technology, and to facilitate civil, meaningful discussion around it.
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The real problem is that consequences for bad behavior just aren't crippling enough to deter bad behavior. Regulations often just place a price on bad behavior, and companies optimize for costs, so usually violating a regulation is just a cost of doing business.
Regulations don't necessarily improve behavior, they just fix a cost to it. So we should increase corporate liability so execs face criminal charges far more often (can't pass that on to customers) and charge for negative externalities (like carbon taxes) so they have a consistent cost to factor into their balance sheets.
Why? We have low unemployment, so we should be outsourcing our low value work so our workers can have the higher paying jobs. Making stuff here just makes it cost more, and reduces our labor pool.
The reason they're too big to fail is because of cronyism. They use government to protect themselves from failure.
I agree, we shouldn't let companies get that big, but the solution isn't forceful break-up, but removal of those protections that they've built up over the years. So things like cable companies throwing obstacles (read: regulations) in the way of competitors.
We need to remove bad regulations and probably create some good new ones. But it all starts by removing protections so market forces can work.
Do you know why that is? Wage and price controls during wartime forced companies to find ways to entice workers other than increasing wages, so we got the comprehensive benefits situation we have now. That worked its way into government, so things like the ACA take workplace benefits into account when determining what benefits you can have.
So we should start by removing incentives for businesses to offer healthcare. Some ideas:
In short, make W-2 employment look a lot more like self-employment so switching jobs doesn't leave employees with a not of confusing decisions, they just pick based on pay and work environment.
Preach!
In my opinion, the role of government is to police that human behavior, as in, ensure everyone is playing by the rules. Large organizations get a seat at the table that most of us don't, and that needs to change.
But as you said, the problem here isn't "capitalism," it's special interests, and those exist regardless of economic system. The goal should be to make the system as transparent as possible so us plebs (read: journalists and independent auditing groups) can see and help fix problems. Thinking about the issue as "more" vs "less" regulation misses the point, the goal should be in simplifying government so it's easier to catch those who cheat.