This quote from the latest FT article is fitting:
While a business elite – of whom Mr Ravalomanana is among the most successful – has grown rich through agriculture and other ventures, the average Malagasy survives on about $330 a year. They have yet to see much benefit from the arrival of foreign investment in biofuels, bitumen and titanium.
The collapse of the vanilla market, and, as the tensions spilled over into violence, the tourist trade, only added to resentment stoked by a agreement last year to lease half the country’s arable land to a conglomerate planning to use it to feed South Korea. That the deal was subsequently halted did not assuage the outrage the Mr Rajoelina was able to harness.
You know, I feel very strongly that this dynamic has been strongly applied to the developed world over the past 10-25 years (depending on when you start the cycle) by private equity and hedge funds who's main objective is to do everything possible to harness all productive capacity and resource production with the use of high degrees of leverage and suck as much of the profit as humanly possible from the enterprises regardless of the plight of the citizens of the planet they squander.
I agree this is nothing new in our short and pathetic experiment with "free economic" models. But I have said and will continue to say, with 6 billion people on a very interconnected planet there simply no longer exist any positive value to trillions of dollars sloshing around in the hands of a few in unregulated markets trading anything and everything to suck as much wealth out of the "economic system" as humanly possible without respect to the plight of the population of the planet.
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