1 posted on
12/01/2013 10:51:46 PM PST by
Olog-hai
To: Olog-hai
How can it be that the act of borrowing money at low interest rates from central banks, and lending it out at higher rates, so as to collect the spread, is such a valuable service that those who engage in it should be so highly compensated? Could it possibly be that the rates at which central banks lend money to commercial banks is actually below the fair market value of the loans, and therefore amount to a market distortion, and this distortion both makes the bankers a lot of money, and also extracts this very same money from parts unknown, at least to John Q. Public? Who might be expected to get very mad when the extraction is discovered, at least based on the generous salaries of the bankers? (To say nothing of the boni.)
2 posted on
12/01/2013 11:17:03 PM PST by
coloradan
(The US has become a banana republic, except without the bananas - or the republic.)
To: Olog-hai
Not bad for a ‘socialist’ country that too often has chastised the US for being uncaring capitalists...
To: Olog-hai
Just another reason the UK, France and Germany should abandon the EU, which is led by idiots in Brussels who only want to impose monetary penalties and huge dues.
The EU is just a ‘junior’ United Nations. They want to push their agendas and extract tons of money from members.
The US should drop from the UN and make them establish their headquarters in some other country. It is a cancer on the nations of the world and it’s slowly eating away at destroying societies everywhere with their goofy ideas.
4 posted on
12/02/2013 12:55:17 AM PST by
octex
To: Olog-hai; All
Only the cheerleaders of Executive Over-Compensation would think its ok for executives of companies so reliant on government be rewarded so much
6 posted on
12/02/2013 3:17:28 AM PST by
SeminoleCounty
(2014: Real Conservatives Only, Please)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson