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Prieur’s readings
The following are some interesting articles I have read over the past few days that readers may also like to have a look at: • John Bogle (The Wall Street Journal): A crisis of ethic proportions, April 20, 2009. • Martin Wolf (Financial Times): Why the “green shoots” of recovery could yet wither, April 21, 2009. • Mohamed El-Erian (Financial Times): Bank tests we should get stressed about, April 21, 2009. • Simon Johnson (The Atlantic): The Quiet Coup, May 2009. • John Makin (AEI): The Fed battles deflation and class warfare, April 2, 2009. • Paul Krugman (New York Times): Erin go broke, April 20, 2009. • Rob Arnott (Indexuniverse.com): Bonds: why bother?, April 2009. We’re in the early stages of a revolution in the index community, now fast extending into the bond arena. In the months and years ahead, we will see the division between active and passive management become ever more blurred. We will see the introduction of innovative products. The spectrum of bond and alternative products for the retail investor will quickly expand. We will shake off our overreliance on dogma. And our industry will be healthier for it.
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[...] du Plessis shares his current reading list here today. A very interesting comment was apparently spurred from a review of Simon Johnson’s book [...]
My response to John Bogle´s ” crisis of ethic proportions ” above is this. I have absolutely no hope that a ” fiduciary society ” where manager/agents act in a way that reflects their ethical responsibilities to society is possible in our lifetime. Before one can be ethically responsible to society, one must be ethically responsible to oneself. When we have a society that places such enormous VALUE on MONEY/WEALTH, where one´s success, happiness, power, etc. are all measured by money/wealth, people are very easily tempted to sell their souls to the devil, and I´m not talking about religion. One´s integrity loses it´s value. One´s word loses it´s value. One´s responsibility to self loses it´s value and no amount of money is ever enough to fill the void. When young adults come out of high school and make their career choices based only on what salary they can earn, ethics can eventually be very easily compromised. Greed and Denial throughout the entire society were at the root of this financial crisis. People with more money than 3 or 4 generations could ever spend still didn´t have enough. The entire value system in our society has to completely change in order to achieve Mr. Bogle´s ethically resposible model. Is it possible in a capitalistic system ? I honestly don´t know. I hope some people smarter than me have some answers.
F. Lotratio