| Accomplishments of the financial industry today: Businesses have far more tools to hedge various risks (FX, commodities, etc) - thanks to the financial sector, Apple is in no danger of dying should the RMB spike. Retail investors are capable of trading for $8 or less, and the bid/ask spread has lowered significantly. It's now drastically easier for retailers to sell goods on credit, and it's vastly easier for customers to pay electronically. 10-15 years ago, you couldn't swipe your ATM/credit card at the grocery store. ETFs are undercutting mutual/index funds, drastically reducing the cost of saving for retirement. Structured products allow far more people to trade with each other than ever before. Microfinance [1] is available to lower income people, albeit with relatively high default premiums. (Admittedly, many people criticize this.) It's not necessarily running better - there have been harmful changes as well. The Intel IPO could no longer happen today, for instance, and in the future far more companies to go public Facebook style than Intel style. But that doesn't change the fact that the financial industry has accomplished a lot. (Of course, I'm not denying that they also rent seek.) [1] Maybe "minifinance" is the appropriate term. Payday loans tend to be 10-100x bigger than third world microfinance. |
Microfinance is a rounding error, and structured products almost put us in the Oklahoma dust bowl about 18 months ago.
... wait, you're extolling the virtues of payday loans? As if loaning money at a high interest rate to financially unsophisticated poor people on bad terms is a new idea?