I have read "corporate greed" here a lot, but such a thing technically doesn't exist.
The law actually requires for corporate management to 'maximize profits' in any way they legally can. Selling things at a discounted price out of benevolence is technically illegal, and shareholders can take the board of directors to court 'on behalf of the corporation'. The laws of incorporation are really set up one way, and I doubt such a system would ever be allowed to come into law if it were introduced today. A very bizarre system indeed.
If a wealthy individual in our society can increase that price to $750 a pill, what does that tell you about the power balance in our country?
Remember, it only backfired on him because he was obvious and extreme. The article highlights how Pharmaceutical companies are systematically doing this, but doing it in less blatantly so as to stay under the radar.
I'm not sure what moderated it in decades past, but it has now become "good business" in our capitalist society for companies to capture a market than jack the price up to the maximum that the market will bear.
Is it a matter of anti-trust laws being watered down through lobbying?
Since election campaigning is in action I hope this gets attention on both sides of the fence as something the Government needs to exert influence over. The people with money sure aren't going to fix it!!!
Actually, I do trust that there are people with money* who have a high sense of ethics.
I'll define "with money" as being among the 200 wealthiest families in USA.
The problem lies with 'the rules of the game'. The law states that actions of management must be to 'maximize company profits' in any (legal) way. Deviating from profit maximization is illegal as crazy as it is.
Going further, economic theory has no room for judgement when it comes to price. You charge the 'market clearing price' for profit maximization and that is that. One penny more or less than that price makes you lose revenue. To put it a different way: people get outraged when prices get higher during Christmas time. Well this isn't gouging, since arbitrary price changes are not logically sound according to economic theory. The best 'profit maximizing price' is just that. At Christmas, demand goes up, and in some cases supply goes down due to the season, and thus a higher price is prescribed to 'clear the market'.
Going back to 'the rules of the game' the only way to stop this 'unethical behaviour' is to change the rules. This is easiest by making legislation preventing unwanted behaviour. Unfortunately, the United States frowns upon government intervention, and thus practices like this are allowed to thrive.
The being said, more socialist policy added into a capitalist system usually leads to better results. As a Canadian I can say that it is nice to have prescription drugs subsidized by the government in varying degrees, as well as a law which imposes price ceilings for drugs. Also government owned utilities has safe guarded us from such situations as with Enron in California, as well as keeping prices low.
But let's not start giving examples of "corporate greed" or corrupt government. There are plenty of each, and any example doesn't prove the point. I would like to know thoughts on:
1. When does acceptable profit become greed?
2. Is it possible to define a point that applies in all cases?
3. Does that point apply to workers, (unions), as well as management?
4. Who decides?
I hear people complain about an exec that makes $100M/year. But when I look at the company, its profit grew $1B under the guidance of that exec. Is the exec getting paid too much? I don't think so.
1. There is no such point, except by breaking the law to increase profit (Fraud, etc). There is only a point of NOT
maximizing profit.
2. Yes: whether the law is broken for profit or not. Sadly this is the only thing remotely defining a measurement for greed in the current 'rules of the game'.
3. Not sure what you mean: either how a company compensates workers, or how workers demand wages.
Companies will try to pay their workers nothing if they can (Slavery for example, or the need for a minimum wage). Or cut down on safety measures, thus externalizing the cost onto the worker (injuries, maimings, and deaths).
As far as workers and unions demanding higher wages: They are limited by the laws of supply and demand. Shortage of workers = higher wages to clear the market. Shortage of work = lower wages. However there are arguments that the higher the minimum wage, the more prosperous for the economy (without causing reduced demand for labour).
4. ultimately society decides. In Economics 'the invisible hand' guides the market. The quick and dirty explanation of that is everyone acts in their own best interest, and as a collective sum of these actions trends occur in the market. Therefore economics can't decide, since people will only act in their own interests. Government is the mechanism for people to act as a collective. Therefore government legislation is really the only answer to these problems (i.e. changing the rules).
As for company executives getting paid high amounts:
Yes supply and demand govern this. However there is an argument that these people can make more than they spend, and thus large portions of currency sit idle in the system which causes problems (but this is another story).