Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Ethics of Selfishness: Egoism


The History Channel began 2009 with the showing of Seven Deadly Sins – pride, envy, lust, anger, gluttony, sloth, and greed . Perhaps the History Channel is reminding us of past excesses in 2008 and gives warning for 2009. Most poignant for our times in the series was the sin of greed. I am reminded of a Cumming, GA housing development company, Wellstone Communities, with whom I did consulting work for in 2006. My role was to provide quality of life initiatives for families in the new Bluffton, South Carolina community. Wellstone Communities was selling new homes like hotcakes to qualified and unqualified buyers. After briefing the new Wellstone chief executive officer about the initiatives to improve people’s quality of life, he quipped to me, “I don’t give a damn about people. We are here to make as much money as possible.” At that moment, my role in helping people ended. This proclaimed Christian company’s tagline of building community and families had ceased and money had become their god. It is January 2009 and Wellstone has completed bankruptcy hearings. First United Bank and Trust Company in Texas is suing the Wellstone corporate officers for $50,000,000.00. Perhaps, Earl’s law of karma, from the TV show My Name is Earl, has come full circle for them.

We have seen the greed of homeowners lying about their income and assets to buy homes. Mortgage lenders have approved loans for unqualified people and people with no income. Investment banks bought bundled mortgage loan packages (good and many bad loans). Congress thwarted lending restrictions on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans for poor applicants. Now there is the expectation that government will bailout many debtors such as banks, auto industry, foreign companies, etc., with little consequence and hardly any accountability. Even pornography publisher Larry Flynt and Girls Gone Wild founder Joe Francis have asked Congress for a 5 billion dollar bailout saying they feel the financial pinch. For this epoch, the prevailing zeitgeist is egoism, acting in one’s own self-interest.

Some argue that bailouts are necessary to save our economy. But does it enable the irresponsible behavior of poor financial management? Others argue to allow the free market economy to run its course regardless of the consequences. The strongest and most innovative will survive like pruning a tree. Both strategies, which are polar opposites, could be devastating to the American quality of life. This is a complex high-risk financial venture. It appears that the focus is how the government can ease the financial pain of Americans, thus escaping our ethic of responsibility. Is the problem about money or is it about moral values? Should our national, corporate, and local leaders be reflective on moral accountability instead of pointing the finger? Do financiers have the courage to examine their motives? Regardless of the financial fix to our current economic problems, who is heralding the moral fix to the root causes of this debacle or will we just continue down the primrose path?

Tom Creely, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Leadership

4 comments:

  1. The Seven Deadly Sins is a great series, I've made it through greed, envy, and lust.

    I'm skeptical of the Bernanke-Geither-Summers Keynesian fiscal policy of the day that appears prepared to keep pumping trillions of dollars into the bottomless pits of bank vaults. There is no easy answer, but the theme here is to continue the status quo of unaccountability and sustaining the parade of debt that goes with it.

    Without immediate accountability and litigation brought against some of the chief architects of our current economic disaster, disbelief in the economic and political system will grow and could undermine the sustainability of our country.

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  2. Great work Tom! Its linked to the new SILEC site..

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  3. I’m sorry I missed series on THC. I’m sure the episode on greed was very applicable to today and the mess we are in. Was it the greed of the banks and mortgage companies or the policies of the quasi-government institutions Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac created this crisis? Personally I believe that there is enough blame to go around for everyone. Banks and lending institutions were not diligent about following common sense practices concerning validation of submitted documentation. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae created a market by offering to almost any loan, so banks funneled as many loans to them as they could, raking off their fees first. Consumers today are accustomed to instant gratification, and dig themselves deep into debt in order to satisfy material desires. The so called stimulus package will do little if anything to fix the problems we face today. If you dig through the bill presented to the Congress, it looks as though it is business as usual – loaded with pork. It seems as though it is being used as a method to a way fund campaign promises instead of stimulating the economy. Why cannot the taxpayers choose the winners and losers in the economy? The bailout money belongs to the taxpayers, not the government. I personally am troubled by the wisdom of selecting a Treasury secretary that avoided paying taxes – this is the man that will oversee the IRS. After all, this is the administration that promised to “drain the cesspool of corruption”.

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  4. I agree completely...no one wants to take accountability any more. What happened to doing what's right for the good of the company instead of going after "short term" individual gain? It's like these big company CEO's are taking lessons from the movie "Wallstreet": Greed is good". I agree as well that there should be stories about executives doing the right thing. We certainly could use more positive news in these tough times.

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