brocksw
Well-known member
Sure. But that's kind of the point. Profit can be a good thing. It can be a good motivator, it can drive innovation, it can make goods and services less expensive, more efficient, and it can introduce competition. Some of these things or some combination of all of them in the right amounts are a net positive for anything that needs Development and innovation. I absolutely acknowledge there are two sides to that coin and capitalism can be borderline canabalistic in nature as well. That's why I wonder if removing the variable of mass ownership of a comoanies shares from a publicly traded market will improve that dynamic. Because the second a nuke company submits an IPO and gets into the public market, you are now introducing huge sums of capital from companies/hedge funds like Black Rock, vanguard, etc. Companies that have no actual first hand knowledge of running a nuke plant, safety, or energy regulations. Their only incentive is to make sure it's profitable, so they can get a return on their investment to support our 401ks, IRAs, and what have you.Private companies try to make a profit too. They just don’t have to do the reporting to make the SEC happy. There is still someone behind them providing capital and that capital needs to make a return. This isn’t the case with a lot of the money the government spends, which means a both good and bad.
So I guess in a way, if my idea is remotely correct (which it may not be), it would allow profit to still be an asset to the company, but it would remove some of the responsibility to shareholders retirement funds and allow the company to make good decisions based on their numbers, designs, long term future, and economics and not what's going to drive share prices up or allow them to spend a couple billion in stock buy backs.
Just a thought anyway...maybe I'm way off.