David Graeber in Salon
I think the spotlight on the financial sector did make apparent just
how bizarrely skewed our economy is in terms of who gets rewarded and
for what. There was this pall of mystification cast over everything
pertaining to that sector—we were told, this is all so very complicated,
you couldn’t possibly understand, it’s really very advanced science,
you know, they are coming up with trading programs so complicated only
astro-physicists can understand them, that sort of thing. We just had to
take their word that, somehow, this was creating value in ways our
simple little heads couldn’t possibly get around. Then after the crash
we realized a lot of this stuff was not just scams, but pretty
simple-minded scams, like taking bets you couldn’t possibly pay if you
lost and just figuring the government would bail you out if you did.
These guys weren’t creating value of any kind. They were making the
world worse and getting paid insane amounts of money for it.
Suddenly
it became possible to see that if there’s a rule, it’s that the more
obviously your work benefits others, the less you’re paid for it. CEOs
and financial consultants that are actually making other people’s lives
worse were paid millions, useless paper-pushers got handsomely
compensated, people fulfilling obviously useful functions like taking
care of the sick or teaching children or repairing broken heating
systems or picking vegetables were the least rewarded.
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