Arjun wrote:Since you claim to be a free-markets proponent, which should put both of us on the same side of the table
Supporting the existance of a useless middleman industry is not compatible with the word free market.
So no you are not on the same side of the table. In fact you are not even in the same building where the table is at. You obviously don't understand the meaning of the word.
- do you seriously believe your personal opinion on finance, or my opinion on autos matters a whit - clearly it should be the market that decides on what is 'productive' and what is not 'productive'
If the market should decide, then there is no reason for the useless middleman industry.
Once honest money is introduced, the power shifts to the people who earn the wealth and away from con men. It is only the people who earned the wealth who have the right to decide what is productive by voting with their money, not some con man industry that owes its existance to money counterfeiting and scamming.
- ....if there exist folks who want to put their money in banks or borrow from one - they have decided that banks play a productive role.
No they haven't. The fiat money the productive earn is counterfeited and loses value due to printing encouraged by the useless middleman industry. This forces the productive to deposit their money in a bank to help keep pace with this counterfeiting (aka inflation). However since inflation figures put out by the useless middleman industry are themselves bogus, the money still loses value as interest paid never equals the real rate of inflation. Inflation is a robbery by the useless middleman industry and a transfer of wealth from the productive to itself for having done no real work other than counterfeiting money & scamming.
Same goes for the private company that calls on an i-banker to take it public
Banks research nothing, invent nothing, develop nothing, manufacture nothing (except scams) so they obviously are no source of wealth. In all instances, its money of the saver that is being gambled with and losses are passed onto the saver through printing and bailouts if and when the venture fails. The profits are quickly privatized however by the useless middleman industry.
or the person who decides to take on life insurance so his family faces less risk,
If someone faces less risk, someone else has to face more risk. Again, it is the saver that is made to take on the risk with no benefit to the saver. The loss however is gladly passed on to the saver through printing & bailouts.
or the person who wants to put his money in the equity market but avoid stock-selection by going through a mutual fund
The issue of fiat money being used to entrap the wealth of the productive aside, if someone wants to do that with their own savings and is willing to pay the fee, the bank would be a providing a productive service.
That aside, the fact that banks have gambled their arse to insolvency is evidence enough that anyone relying on banks for investment advice is crazy - especially given that bank business model relies on scamming the productive economy.
or the entrepreneur who wants capital and knocks on the door of the VC firm to fund him / her.
If the capital is coming from a saver in the productive economy, it is a productive industry. If venture "capital" company is like goldman sachs which is ripping off the productive, its destructive.
2) Since you seem to have formed a primitive association that only 'deterministic' outcome fields are productive
Obviously you don't understand the meaning of the word productive.
Even a street preformer who performs tricks for coins is part of the productive economy. He offers entertainment and does not rob society but merely asks that people volunteer a donation for his efforts if they enjoyed it.
A person who starts a business selling his invention with his own savings and fails is still part of the productive economy. His efforts and thousands like him eventually give rise to succesful companies.
The unproductive useless middleman industry forces itself upon productive society through scams like bad money, counterfeiting, bailouts, gaming and scaming to appropriate the wealth of the productive to itself. Its a con business akin to crime which offers no value to society and only lives off the productive energies of others.
All that a pharma firm coming out with a new drug has done is that it has tested the drug out on thousands of cases and determined that the drug would 'most likely' not have 'adverse consequences' for the majority of folks.
Drugs are tested for efficacy, not just safety. It take almost a billion dollars for a company to get a drug to market and its a 10 year process to get it approved. Almost anything in the private sector that relies on selling a product to society that society willingly buys is productive. The useless middleman industry has little to sell except scams and games the system to milk the productive.
There will be enough savers who will be willing to put in their money into the top corporate names through corporate bond offerings.
That's upto savers.
But what about the thousands of SME names across every country? Do you seriously believe that savers would research these company's financials and start lending directly to these SMEs??
Savers are savers because they are good at judging risk and managing their own money - unlike the fools running today's insolvent banks. If the potential reward is high enough and risk low enough, capital will go anywhere. If savers judge some company to be undeserving of their investment, it won't get it. Its a hard process to convince a saver to part with his surplus. Its not as simple as getting some idiot at a bank to sign off on a loan and print up the money at the savers' expense and then start hollering for a bailout.