How the word
‘Profit’ get to be a four letter word?
The dictionary defines the word ... ‘profit’
in the following manner: “ the monetary
surplus left to a producer or employer after
deducting wages, rent, cost of raw
materials, etc.: The company works on a
small margin of profit.”
So how is it that our current administration
sees the profits gained by the banking
system as ‘excessive’ and ‘unacceptable’ and
has decided to impose a tax on these
entities? Well, excuse me, they didn’t
exactly call it a tax, they referred to it
as a fee or a levy. Which in my mind is the
same thing. You can call it what you want,
but any so-called fee, levy, fine or
whatever… is in essence a tax . Pure and
simple. If I want to go fishing, I need a
fishing license, which is a fee to the
government for the right to fish…I have to
pay the fee which is a tax for the privilege
of fishing. People who don’t care to fish do
not have to pay the fee so they aren’t taxed
for it.
Obviously none of us like to reward bad
behavior and the banks certainly have fallen
into that category over these last few
months. However, to punish those who not
only paid back any loans they received from
the gubmint (government) and to have made a
profit on top of their problems smacks of
gubmint interference in free enterprise.
Those of us who have looked at the root
causes of the financial collapse know that
gubmint policies (both Democratic and
Republican) requiring loans to be made to
subprime borrowers without proper oversight
was the underlying cause. Hopefully those
policies have been corrected and rules put
into place which should prohibit the
disaster we saw occur just recently. I
certainly hope so.
If the banking industry managed to correct
their woes and have monies left over for
bonuses, as far as I’m concerned, good for
them. For the gubmint to step in and make a
decision that their profits were excessive
and their bonus structure improper can lead
us down a path that capitalistic countries
should not want to travel.
How much profit is enough for any one
industry? Who decides this in the future? Is
it wise to let the gubmint mandate the
percentage of profits anyone is allowed to
earn? Is 5% too little and 10% too much?
Some years ago I was in Washington D.C. and
was eating dinner…the guy next to me asked
me what I thought about Bill Gates. I told
him I thought Gates was an American hero.
The guy said he thought Gates made too much
money. I argued back with … “how much is too
much?” He didn’t have a solid answer. Did
Bill Gates help bring computers into nearly
every home in this country? I’d venture he
had a lot to do with it. Does his personal
wealth hurt me in any form or fashion? Not
that I’m aware of.
By levying a tax on the profits of banks in
our country we will end up levying a tax on
any and all of us. Profits in and of
themselves are not evil; they generate more
capital which in turn invests in more
enterprises. This is a concept I find easy
to understand and cannot for the life of me
figure out why others have difficulty with
it. The stock markets would have zero growth
and collapse if all companies lost money or
had no profits to share. Isn’t increased
share prices the result of good performance?
Why punish those who are doing good?
These banks or any other for profit
enterprise will pass their extra charges
(taxes, fees, fines..etc) to the
consumer…which is us. If you buy a
hamburger, the cheese is extra, banks will
charge for their cheese. You want to return
to the days of walking into a bank to cash a
check or use the closest ATM? Watch that fee
get increased. You and I will pay part of
the tax, won’t we?
Sure we can move from one bank to another in
search of lower rates and monthly operating
fees, but for how long? If the gubmint
decides to penalize all lending institutions
who made a profit then where do we go when
the fees to us are coming from all
institutions, large and small?
Even more ominous is which industry will be
next? Suppose they decide that your business
or my business earns too much money, does
this cause us to look for more ways to
become more profitable and more efficient? I
think not. No I believe if you take the
profit incentive out of business and
industry you will destroy the capitalistic
society we currently enjoy. The alternative
is to plod along like good little comrades
and silently eat our cold gruel.
Comments go to
pperry@austin.rr.com,
complaints go no where.
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