I'll sum this up...
You can't legislate greed and always remember the golden rule...those with the gold make the rules.
I'd agree that you can't legislate greed.
However, I think the first rule of a government is to protect it's
primary asset.
Unlike what appears to be commonly believed, that 'primary asset'
is NOT the economy.
The primary asset of any country is the majority of it's citizens!
Once you properly protect and serve the best interests of the citizens,
by doing things like ensuring that the cost of living doesn't outstrip income
for the largest group of the population in the middle of the bell curve, so to speak.
For a government, that can mean protecting the interests of smaller family owned businesses over the back-room closed-door lobbying of larger businesses
Government should be ensuring that citizen-owned small businesses thrive just as much as big companies do, without allowing the money and influence of big business to tip the playing field on small businesses.
Another task of a successful government is ensuring that products sold and shipped overseas from a nation versus products purchased from overseas
always come out a net profit for the citizens in the end-- ensuring that
citizens budget can equally select between local and foreign.
We've now spent so much time with the 'favored trading partner' stuff
that Joe's Wrench Company in Connecticut can't compete price-wise
with Chinese imports given special pricing status by Congress, at the behest of WallyWorld.
Too often, our government creates laws that are good for WalMart, but bad for Joes' Hardware Store and Tool Factory.
This doesn't mean that government has to regulate US businesses, other than to ensure a fair and level playing table between small and large business.
But it does mean that the US government should not enact laws that make it more profitable for businesses to outsource overseas than to pay US workers good wages.
Tariffs on products shipped back into the country fixes that, or
tax and other incentives to manufacture inside a country's borders, and higher taxes if manufacturing is sent overseas.
The basic thing I think our big businesses and government have forgotten
is that the shareholder is not the most important part of the economy.
the citizen is the most important part of the economy.
Incentivize that situation to reverse itself, and we'll have solved
a lot of our jobs problem, our national debt problem, and many others as well.
Simply seeing the amount of money being paid to stockholders go up and up doesn't equate to a healthy economy that is supposedly making a nation better and better.