Sometimes we here need to really step outside the realm of logic and ponder things while keeping in mind how other humans actually behave.
And,
per contra, this is the exact reason why penalties against barely-provable malfeasance cannot work: people are gonna do these things
anyway. Any economic system is subject to gaming of one sort or another: and having confidence that people, 'capitalists' in this case, will not game the system merely because the things they do are considered wrong by others ( or by the courts ) is futile. I've always considered the libertarian trust in 'honest markets' as a touching tenet of faith by the religiously insane.
Personally, I think the thing to do is to change the system entirely rather than attempt reform; but if going for the latter, it might be better to prune away the endless new financial instruments that through over-complexity mean few understand them and establish revised --- non-complex --- tax codes, than go after those scapegoats who are occasionally caught just doing exactly what one would expect them to do, if one has a affably low opinion of human nature.
One British prime minister --- a conservative --- once jeered at the Stock Market as 'a Casino'. If one plays in a casino owned by the Mob, it is tiresome to complain that they have rigged the machines to favour the house.
An interesting article from Arabic Knowledge:
Why Insider Trading Is Hard to Define, Prove and PreventRajaratnam, said by Forbes magazine to be worth $1.3 billion, has denied any wrongdoing, and is free on a $100 million bond. The federal complaint accuses him of obtaining inside information to execute trades that earned Galleon $12.7 million between January 2006 and July 2007. Other illegal trading produced millions more in profits, according to law enforcement officials, who said the inside information involved earnings and acquisitions, among other data.
I have no idea why someone who is worth --- even mainly on paper --- $1.3 billion wants more money.
Claverhouse
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