Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Tempting Offer?!?

I am not scatalogically-preoccupied. But on Page 53 of this week's Economist magazine - the European edition at least - is an advertisement for Bocconi SDA's Master's in Fine Food and Beverage with a picture of what appears, at first-sight to be a large Parisian sidewalk pile of excrement with the caption "Come and see how tasty a Masters in Management could be." Ummmm, thanks, but no.

With our current predicament fueled by such Masters, I couldn't help but chuckle at the sight (though my appetite, upon seeing and recounting it, now, to you, has decidedly been lost) and timing. Of course - for The Few Master's themselves, flush with their spoils and nouveau-elevated tastes that increasingly only they can afford - will undoubtedly recognize the mess-pile as a rare and valued Truffle, sure as their covetous and parochially selfish eyes can recognize a Vintage Krug on a purveyor's shelf at 30 meters (or more!). But one would be forgiven for wondering whether Bocconi's PR Agency boys and/or girls were looking for a little payback while working out their pink-slip notice period(s) recently handed to them as a result of the fallout of The Masters' financial follies.

Lest you think me unfair to said Masters (for the would-be's of this Bocconi course are arguably harmless), I will happily point out that I do not single them out, for the pavements are veritably littered with piles of crap, from the legislative capitals where lawmakers have whored themselves like street-harlots, while even those that didn't were too timid, ignorant, or fearful of electoral backlash to interrogate the foundations and wisdom of unlimited credit sans regulation or prudential tether, to suburbia and the American heartlands desperation to believe in tooth-faeiries, Santa Claus, Goldilocks, and pixie-dust as panaceas for unsustainable consumption over production, and at the collective level, unsustainable fiscal expenditure relative revenue.

7 comments:

  1. I think it is meant to be a truffle.

    Page 68 in the Asian edition.

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  2. sadly I can't find it in the UK edition

    -C-

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  3. It's in the US version as well.

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  4. GDP plunges in Germany and Japan show that what is unsustainable is production over consumption.

    Try some MoslerEconomics.com and you will certainly learn something. (not an endorsement, just a statement)

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  5. Drinking?


    Again?

    (me too...)

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  6. "lawmakers have whored themselves like street-harlots"

    Yes.

    "too timid, ignorant, or fearful of electoral backlash to interrogate the foundations and wisdom of unlimited credit sans regulation or prudential tether"

    Yes, but the roots of the moral hazard that is now so furiously coming to light themselves lie in the "prudential tether" of government regulation.

    "unsustainable consumption over production, and at the collective level, unsustainable fiscal expenditure relative revenue"

    Yes, but these both clearly stem from government actions. What we are doing now is simply buying more trouble.

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