But sir you are the one spinning a tale. I have asked a very simple question – can you give me a quantifiable value of the rip-off? If the economy is growing in real-terms, doesn’t it mean that there is no destruction of ‘value’? All we get from you are vigorous hand-waving and grim foreboding tales of –ripoffs, Keynesian scams and a future bill (shades of – ‘trust me Iraq has WMDs?)Neshant wrote:A tale can be spun to justify any ripoff under the keynesian economic system as being in the interest of the boarder segment of society. Probably with 10 trillion was handed out to banking crooks and the economy fell even further down the hole, it would be deemed as being in the interest of the broader segment of society.
The con artistry of keynesian economics is to rip a person off and tell him it was in his interest. The good news is the people are catching onto this scam.
You are free to hire a plumber costing less. Sadly I'm not free to not pay for the the gambling losses of banking crooks. Secondly the plumber has a productive role in society. Scamming banks, beyond a marginal utility role, have little productive value. But they sure talk up a storm of BS when it comes to justifying their parasitic existance.
Re plumbers – I’m afraid I cannot hire a cheaper plumber. I am forced to endure this scam of paying ridiculously inflated price because I cannot get my cheap and good Indian plumber to move to US because the government has restricted the free movement of labour supply and has given such people an unfair advantage. Hence I’m forced to go along with this scam (At least in the Banks, I have the option of keeping my money under a pillow and avoiding fees). But if the value of my money would go down by keeping them under a pillow, then they are protecting the real value of my money and therefore providing a real service

I’m forced to ask a higher salary to pay for such inflated plumbing scams which a closed labour market allows to rip me off
