Daly and Cobb say there is plenty of room to complain
about monopoly profits, but that is a complaint against monopoly, not against profits per se: «If one dislikes bureaucratic decision making then one must accept the market and the profit motive, if not as a positive good then as the lesser of two evils... We have no hesitation in opting for the market as the basic institution of resource allocation» (p. 48).
Not exact matches
What some of us are worried
about is the shoddy approach this whole program has taken, and the obscene
profits that a
monopoly will promote.
Shopping where quality matters more than
profit is where my money is best spent and I know how to look at a product to see if it's worthy of my money... I don't care what company produced it, as long as it is good quality and if Americans didn't shop that way, we'd be giving the
monopoly on everything we buy to greedy corporations that care more
about profit margins than quality and satisfied customers.
They say Amazon's demands for deeper discounts threaten already - thin
profit margins, and some warn
about an Amazon
monopoly.
It's
Monopoly money, at best... Ironically, the less you care
about money, and
profits & losses, the more abstract the notion of fear & greed will become — you'll become far more rational & effective in your investment decision - making.