I've worked at Goldman before grad school. The reason why I'm so adamant about the topic is because culturally the place was very straight edge.
As I said, it's typical for corrupt organizations to be 'squeaky clean' with most people, I listed Enron and MCI at their worst as examples. Few employess saw anything not normal and ethical.
Its very naive to try to infer the company not doing unethical things from that, from the view of a lower level employee.
However, there are still some useful things at times you can add from that.
That being said, EVERY company will come up short when it comes to any sort of moral framework - people have this misguided view of what corporations do. The purpose of a company is to generate profit for the shareholders; anything beyond that can be attributed to public image or goodwill moves. Color me shocked when an insurance company denies $2M operation for a dying cancer patient.
You convinced me, there's no such thing as ethics, all companies are equally good.
You sound like the type of person who has adopted a world view around working in an industry and is very ready to rationalize. Soldeirs do it, economists do it, health insurance (oops you used that that) does it.
That doesn't make it ok. Look at the Cigna VP who has left the industry to write a book and do publicity exposing the way the industry works, with moral criticisms and suggestions.
Look at General Smedley Butler who, then the most decorated man in US history, wrote 'War is a Racket' and discussed how he realized the corrupt use of the US military.
I'll tell you one you might not know - the man who through the US had the right approach, and, as a senior figure in the USSR's nuclear weapons, leaked documents - and was executed when caught.
I don't know if you have seen The Corporation', but the reason wy we have a democratic government who can reglate corporations (where the corrupt court hasn't prevented it) is the amorality you admitted.
Corporations need to be reigned in to serve the public good - of if that's too traditional for you, at leaqst not hurt it terribly. The 'profit motive', like personal desire for property or sex, is expected to be reigned in.
You don't say rape is ok, because 'some men have taken sex from women when they want for thousands of years, it's a natural urge'. Same for robbery, etc.
You concern me, that I can't tell if you list the bad things corporations can do with concern or none.
And 'guarantee' is definitely the right word in this case - the Greek government wouldn't have entered into swaps if they thought they'd end up on the wrong side of it.
You guaranteed they 'knew fully they were taking shortcuts for EU approval'. That's not the same as thinking they won't get screwed. Ask Bernie Madoff investors how well that works sometimes.
Im criticizing your logic but as I said, I agree with the previous conclusion, Greece obviously knew they were obtaining backdoors from GS to deceive the EU approval, from what I've seen.
EU should've done due diligence on the members and this sort of issue would come with or without derivatives in the place - many economists have said in the past that this issue will come up. It's very difficult to have a singular monetary union when you members are all over the place in terms of culture and GDP/capita. Sooner or later the wealthier countries will have to subsidize the poorer ones, especially if they like to run heavy public sector and social spending.
Ths is 'blame the victim' nonsense. If someone breaks in your house and shoots you tonight, we should
post not how terrible they were, but how you should have done due diligence buying more security.
If someone shoplifts from a store, who cares - the store should have done due diligence to catch them.
Those EU countries face challenges to make the Euro - so misleading them is not a problem, you suggest?
The group who sells techniques to food sellers to not get caught by regulators, that cut their costs but sicken people, didn't do anything wrong, right?
Oh, and the fact they invest heavily in wheelchairs just before the product is sold, knowing the sickness causes paralysis, and makes a good profit - no problem.