| > There is a reason why formally socialist China and India are trying to develop private sector players in these fields - a private corporation has the ability to be much more nimble around hiring and capital allocation unlike an SOE. Are they? After Chinese private tech companies got too big, they reigned them in and made them closer to the state than ever. I'd love to see actual proof that China is really lessening it's involvement in companies, because I haven't seen such a trend in a significant manner. > Also, your argument does not challenge my point how Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea leverage massive conglomerates instead of SOEs or small businesses to cement their lead in the Semiconductor Industry. I happen to be based in Korea and be familiar with the insides of the conglomerates. None of the conglomerate subsidiaries have a monopoly in any sector or country like, for example, Google does in ads and search, or Intel did in CPUs for a decade or so, with >80% market shares. Hyundai Auto is kind of getting there domestically, but that's it, and it's the exception plus the domestic market is only a small part of their revenue. Similarly, the overwhelming majority of the subsidiaries are not "too big to fail". During the IMF crisis in the late 90s and in its aftermath, several conglomerates failed. As a result, to this day, the financials of the subsidiaries are not particularly intertwined with each other. Sure, they sometimes give each other contracts (why wouldn't you), but that's always just a small part. They're run very independently. And it still happens that they "fail", or at least do poorly enough that the conglomerate wants to get rid of them, in which case there's usually a buyer looking to snap it up and turn things around. |
What’s the excuse now, I wonder. West is not western enough? America not American enough? Is it that it’s not been made great again yet? No, our economy collapsing is the immigrants fault! Or maybe it’s the far right! It could be anything and anyone, so long as it’s not the unethical capitalism. How dare I even suggest that capitalism can be anything but perfect. Maybe I’m the problem.
This the great American distraction. In reality, it is just a number of self-serving executives grifting society. Parasites so attached to the host that it fears removing them. If we just appease the parasites this one more time, do one more bailout, surely things will only get better, right?