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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, The Government’s Job / Non-Job 6 Views
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Description:
What is the government's job? What is their... non-job? And are they going to find a way to tax us for both? (Short answer: yes, probably).
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop the government's job and non job so what
- 00:07
is the government's job when it comes to helping us manage our finances or even
- 00:12
think about finance or set up the laws you know set the table for the way we
- 00:17
govern ourselves as it relates to finance well is it their job to guide us
- 00:23
into what stock we should buy yourself no definitely not [Uncle Sam putting up wooden sign]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
is it their job to make a level playing field so that everyone gets treated
- 00:32
equally ish yeah more or less and that's at least the goal even though it doesn't
- 00:37
happen in real life well we have to start by looking back for our country's [black hole of money]
- 00:40
long and sordid history as it relates to financial dealings
- 00:44
well after myriad screwing Sauveur of innocent to mostly farmer types trying [unhappy farmers]
- 00:49
to invest like the well-educated and rare at the time anyway college
- 00:54
graduates of the early 20th century America the government stepped in [happy college graduates]
- 00:58
through various means trying to shelter the average citizen from doing stupid
- 01:03
things with their money and there are ethical questions here right is it the
- 01:06
government's job to prevent people from doing stupid things with their own money [man makes a suit out of money]
- 01:11
mmm well people smoke people drive 98 miles an hour in the highway people
- 01:16
don't wear a helmet when they're driving on the motorcycle they watch hours of
- 01:21
reality TV shows well the government allows smoking why isn't crazy investing
- 01:25
in that category as well hmm and for that matter why don't we ban the lottery
- 01:30
as well that's just about the dumbest quote investment decision unquote one [lottery tickets]
- 01:35
can make but in fact the government doesn't try to prevent those kinds of
- 01:39
stupid things rather it's the job of the regulator's of the government to require [bottles of alcoholic drinks]
- 01:43
disclosure of risks hopefully so that they're understandable for more or less
- 01:48
everyone when investment opportunities come along it is not the government's
- 01:52
job to prevent the doing of stupid things yeah smokers know that cigarettes
- 01:56
are bad for them the badness is disclosed the same goes for investing
- 02:01
risks ie on page 14 of whatever investing prospectus well it'll probably
- 02:06
say something like the company believes that the chemicals will make the cows [pages flipping in book]
- 02:10
fart Chanel number five instead of producing ozone destroying methane [highlighted passages in book]
- 02:15
however it may also make them nuclear reactive in which case well good luck
- 02:21
for all of us tiny little mushroom clouds horns even [explosion]
- 02:24
if a bunch of farms get nuked the badness then was disclosed so you know
- 02:30
lawyers go away well the key distinction between public
- 02:33
and private investing is that public investing carries much more of the
- 02:38
weight of government regulators behind it the hurdles companies must jump
- 02:42
through in order to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange our high hurdles [woman jumps through hurdles]
- 02:47
long periods of audited financials deep disclosures of the business practices of [writing on white board]
- 02:52
the company the management what they did and whether that arrest in Rio really
- 02:57
was about heroin and meth dealing and then what about the board of directors
- 03:01
what's their history do they know finance or do they just know baseball
- 03:05
and football like Bo hundreds of audit requirements the list goes on and on and
- 03:09
on well this set of strictures applies to
- 03:11
publicly traded stocks and bonds and here are the regulations for private
- 03:16
investments ie when Arsenio Q public decides to invest in hedge funds R Us
- 03:22
yeah pretty much nothing why mmm alright we're thinking well what about investing
- 03:26
in another kind of private fund like you know a hedge fund
- 03:29
it's like private equity hedge fund venture capital what about them well now
- 03:33
most hedge funds required that the investor declare that they have a net [writing on white board]
- 03:36
worth of over n millions of dollars or income levels above 250 grand 500 grand
- 03:42
something like that or that they are a self-proclaimed financial expert in one
- 03:47
form or another and they can demonstrate it and it doesn't mean they just took
- 03:50
this crappy yet remote finance course but that's it relatively no regulations [tumble weeds roll through town]
- 03:55
applied a private investing other than that investors must live by a more or
- 03:59
less whatever is written in a contract that they've signed that indenture thing
- 04:03
yeah that matters so then a bunch of journalists who clearly never took this
- 04:07
crappy all right it's not so crappy finance course right endlessly about how
- 04:11
unfair it is to the common man that they didn't get to invest half their
- 04:16
hard-earned savings in the original round of Google that these private
- 04:20
venture capital funds are only for the rich and generally not very famous well
- 04:25
the reality is 99% of venture capital funds are awful
- 04:30
they're awful investments like you put in a million dollars and all you get
- 04:33
back is a mug that says thank you for playing come again about a third of [a mug next to a pile of money]
- 04:37
those funds don't even return half of the money put into them and another [pie charts]
- 04:41
third are lucky to return all the original principal capital invested
- 04:45
still another 30% do worse than a typical growth index mutual fund and in
- 04:50
which pretty much anyone with $250 or more can invest and buy so should we
- 04:56
keep people from buying venture capital funds when we know they'll lose most of
- 05:00
their money it's basically one flavor or another of the lottery yeah should we [lottery tickets]
- 05:04
protect that kind of common man well in general the attitude of the government
- 05:07
has been that if private wealthy people want to take a lot of risk trying to
- 05:11
find a lottery ticket well then they shouldn't have to be protected in the
- 05:15
same way the government protects the average honest farmer saving six
- 05:19
thousand dollars a year to hopefully put his kid through college so they don't
- 05:23
have to be farmers well ultimately this is a question without an answer some
- 05:26
people will forever argue that the government should get more involved in
- 05:30
the world of finance regulated heavily while others will argue that the feds
- 05:33
should you know keep their hands out and let the money do the talking either way
- 05:37
it's a balancing act on one hand trying to protect the little guy and on the
- 05:40
other hand trying not to overburden businesses and corporations with
- 05:44
government intervention so yeah like walking a tightrope across
- 05:47
shark-infested waters it's always Shark Week around here it's month [Uncle Sam walking a tight rope above sharks]
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