you anecdote is very apposite and imho applies beyond just the financial realm.
financial innovation is dirt cheap. get enough aligned interests around a table and you can create new contracts, new financial markets etc out of thin air. its all fundamentally just a game around information control, an intermediary forcefully interjected in the economy and extracting rents.
now, the quiz: in which other sector is most "innovation" dirt cheap and essentially just a game around information control, an intermediary forcefully interjected in the economy and extracting rents?
the only thing that could be worse than what we have today is when those two "innovative" sectors merge. yet this outcome is inevitable and it will happen fairly soon.
financial innovation is dirt cheap. get enough aligned interests around a table and you can create new contracts, new financial markets etc out of thin air. its all fundamentally just a game around information control, an intermediary forcefully interjected in the economy and extracting rents.
now, the quiz: in which other sector is most "innovation" dirt cheap and essentially just a game around information control, an intermediary forcefully interjected in the economy and extracting rents?
the only thing that could be worse than what we have today is when those two "innovative" sectors merge. yet this outcome is inevitable and it will happen fairly soon.