Wall Street
There has been a lot of deserved talk about the three legs of corporatism: the right wing message machine, religious fundamentalists, and corporate billionaire funding. However, not as much has been said about Wall Street’s overarching contribution: its creeping dominance over our economy and how its amoral philosophical values have seeped into every part of our culture.Wall Street has not always been so dominant in our philosophical discussions nor in our economy.
When I was a college student in the early 1980s, the spiderweb of international finance dominating our lives did not look as it does now.
All this means that banking and investing were not the “go-to” professions that they have been more recently.
In the 1980s, that changed. As Reagan began shifting the tax code toward the wealthy and smashing the regulatory structures built over decades, general business majors saw new opportunity in finance. A doctor or lawyer could only charge so much per hour or per visit, but financiers had leverage.
By the end of the 1980s, we had seen Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, Wall Street, Boesky, Milken, a scary one-day market plunge, and a junk bond crisis. We also saw a drastic shift in wealth distribution and the beginning of personal credit acceleration that would continue until 2009. It’s hard to convey how much the whole cultural notion of wealth and where and how to get it had been drastically changed.
And it has stayed pretty much the same since then. The market has been infinitely more interesting, even exciting, peaking in the dotcom era but still strong today.
In the 1970s, ambitious and marginally honest people went into law. It was considered the fastest way to wealth next to medicine. Not coincidentally, there were a lot of jokes about what sharks lawyers were. In the 1980s, I went to law school (also hugely popular because of L.A. Law) so I heard a lot of them.
Starting in the late 1980s, banker and broker jokes gained steam and, in my experience, eventually surpassed the lawyer jokes.
In the late 1980s I often rode the elevator with young guys in expensive suits bragging to each other about their big… financing deals. Since the 1980s, more of the best and brightest and certainly the greediest college students have gone to work on Wall Street. I know you’ve heard that statistic before. Here is what it has meant in deeper terms.
The young turks of the last 30 years have been pouring into Wall Street, building up the intricate international network of banking, gambling, investing, money laundering, privatized gains and public losses that we have today. And we let them. We were dazzled by Robin Leach, the gold bathroom fixtures and the chinchilla dog beds. We didn’t spot that while real economic growth lifts everyone, financing played this way is a zero-sum game. That gold faucet came from some unfortunate investor’s college fund.
It could have been different. And that is what I will write about next.
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