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Why don't more engineers/scientists go into finance |
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| Jun13-12, 09:56 AM | #52 |
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Why don't more engineers/scientists go into financeWhat worries me is that without large amounts of funding of universities, the pipeline will go dry (at least in the US). |
| Jun13-12, 03:35 PM | #53 |
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It's very hard for a new startup to grow into a market leader, that's certainly true. But you don't have to found the next Facebook to do quite well for yourself. (Other than that, I have to agree about the supremacy of marketing and sales over engineering, although it galls me to say that. A product is necessary, and it needs to function, but OK is really good enough. To be a successful company, though, you absolutely need a team of people who can sell the **** out of it.) |
| Jun13-12, 08:48 PM | #54 |
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One funny thing is that being a CEO in Silicon Valley or in Austin isn't a big deal. Lots of people are CEO's. CEO's don't have a huge amount of power. Now being a VC funder...... California is special because non-compete agreements are unenforceable. Universities are also important, because universities don't mind if you have an outside side-job. If you do university research, and then you come up with something, the university will actually *help* you start a company to commercialize it. Most employers will get annoyed if you do something like that. |
| Jun14-12, 07:07 AM | #55 |
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| Jun14-12, 02:16 PM | #57 |
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Aside from that, Silicon Valley is just very startup-friendly. There are many companies that specifically service new tech startups, and provide them with office space, furniture, computer and network infrastructure, etc. Plus it's a good thing to know that if you have an good idea and an excellent powerpoint presentation, there are plenty of people willing to listen to you and throw money in your direction to get you started. Sometimes I am forced to admit... capitalism can be a good thing!
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| Jun15-12, 06:09 AM | #58 |
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I've been watching this thread and am amazed that it has continued for so long. I see a bunch of posts that pretty well express my views.
Some of my classmates who went into business or finance make more than me, but most make less. I went into science and engineering because I wanted to do something useful and practical with my life, something to make this world a better place to live. I never cared about the money, but I've always had more than I needed. Now I'm at the age when many are considering retirement, but I keep working because it is so much fun. For the last year, I've been paid well to do nothing more than to learn and train so that I can be productive developing new technology that has the potential of solving some of our most serious problems that finance majors can only complain and worry about. |
| Jun15-12, 06:20 AM | #59 |
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Capitalism rewards businesses that serve people: socialism/fascism/communism does not allow people to rise and fall on their own genuine merits. Proper capitalism allows people to take risks and suffer the consequences if they screw up while rewarding people that get it right to do more of what they already do best. But capitalism needs some solid foundations that come in the form of economic, monetary/fiscal, trade, business, IP, other associated policies, regulations, and laws to make it a true capitalistic framework. You can't have real capitalism with monopolies, or with any kind of centralized system that discourages competition because capitalism requires this. What we have today though is not capitalism, and it will never be when any of the underlying systems mentioned above are monopolies themselves. |
| Jun15-12, 08:37 AM | #60 |
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Looking at the discourse in the US, the discourse is massively skewed into the direction of positive freedom (freedom to do something), and there everyone is focused mainly on a supposedly "free" economy. Unfortunately, both types of freedom are two sides of the same medal. If you don't have one, you can't geuinely have the other. Interestingly, that system smells much more of corporatism than anything else. I much more prefer the Swedish system to be honest, rather than that stone-age "capitalism" practiced in the US (does not seem so different from China anymore). Hope people at some point realize, that the sixties were not so bad after all (in terms of average prosperity). |
| Jun15-12, 09:07 AM | #61 |
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The system I (intended to) describe(d) is one that intends to be fair to all parties. This fairness imposes fundamental limits on things like the monetary system, business and trade practices, credit and banking limits, liquidation policies, and regulation amongst other things. It does not mean absolute freedom to do whatever. Absolute freedom is a misnomer and I agree with your analysis thereof. We actually already have some of these things in, but funnily enough (but not the least bit surprising) some of the new regulations get wiped out down the line. We have anti-trust laws for example. We used to have corporation charter laws that were meant to give the public some kind of protection but they have gone. We implemented Glass-Steagal after the depression but that is gone. We had money pegged to gold for a reason and now that is gone (at least for now). All these things and more, help create a situation of fairness. It does not mean freedom in an absolute sense: there is always a price to way for freedom, and unfortunately it always ends badly like putting a live hand grenade in a chimps hand. With regards to free markets, my definition of free is free in the way that there the conditions for entry, for growth, and for operating are ones that operate more or less in ways that every entity agrees in fair. Whenever you end up with having to implement a body or some system which is highly integrated with society (like the financial system), then the result is that the amount of protection and regulation that matches the potential abuse that this does to the rest of the system. We already have this 'kind' of thing, but it is clearly not what it should be. The best way though is to create systems that are decentralized if possible, and ones that everyone can agree on. The reason is that decentralized systems have no point of failure and are a lot easier for everyone to agree on. In practical terms, this means more localization to get rid of things like systemic risk which can be realized in terms of currencies, credit systems, trade systems, and so on. There are a lot of different realizations of what is fair, but the idea is that if you want systems that are highly intricately linked like our financial system is today, then you need to add in a lot more protection so that it takes care of the worst (because it will probably happen, and it does in the form of hundred year floods). If you localize, you won't need this kind of thing, but you will have other issues to face. IMO, the best solution would involve decentralization of currency, credit, and other systems that everyone can agree on (the most important thing) in a systemwide fashion. Having systems where people don't agree will always end badly. The agreement when reached translates into law for exchange and acceptance of credit, and the rest of it follows from there. |
| Jun15-12, 11:12 AM | #62 |
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And that's where the crux of the current situation lies: the problem is not even that we need to make something that "everybody can agree on", but rather that we have a system where a few very influential small groups dominate the entire discourse and impose their needs on others. (Funny enough, now the US government tells the Europeans to fix their financial system...) In regards to the thread: I once read a number that about 20% of current Physics and Math graduates end up in the financial sector. From my point of view, that number should be several orders of magnitude smaller. So I wonder - how many more people do you want to go into finance? I have no problem with finance as such, as it is a very important mechanism of allocating a limited number of ressources (which in the end comes down to money). But one needs to ask the question whether an economy is sustainable when a significant part of the populace is involved in trading _non_physical_ goods of some sort (be it services or financial products doesn't matter much), when less and less people are actually there to come up and produce anything substantial. |
| Jun15-12, 11:21 PM | #63 |
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| Jun18-12, 06:51 AM | #64 |
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Nano-passion: I work with a group of 150 engineers who do consulting for various companies who need help developing their ideas, or whose own engineering staff is overwhelmed with work. I'm humbled to be working with such awesome talent.
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| Jun18-12, 10:15 AM | #65 |
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It's not a few influential small groups dominating discourse. It's a lot of different groups each with their agendas. For example, you have the small banks versus the large banks versus the hedge funds versus mutual funds and that's just in the financial industry. Maybe there are too many people in finance, but would anyone be better off, if I didn't take the money? |
| Jun18-12, 10:40 AM | #66 |
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The big question is what are the "bare minimum rules" you can get people to agree to in order to prevent another disaster. The other thing is that things will naturally centralize in finance, and law tends to centralize things. One thing about finance is that people will want to do the deal where they can find fast, efficient, and predictable courts. So if you have a complex securities transaction, you want it done in the Southern District of NY, or in London, or in HK, because if something goes wrong, it goes before a judge that has heard a million of these cases before. There's also the "Las Vegas" effect. If you outlaw something everywhere except for one place, that one place will make a ton of money. There are several small islands in the Caribbean (BVI, Bermuda, or the Cayman Islands) that have entire economies based on being able to do stuff there that you can't anywhere else. |
| Jun18-12, 08:45 PM | #67 |
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I am also not as ignorant as to believe that the financial system as such is the root of all evil. However, I very strongly believe that the current system is not sustainable, and that 10, 15 years from now in countries like the US or Britain the financial sector simply cannot be as big (as percentage of GDP) as it is now. So I am asking myself if it still makes sense to start a career in finance (for me, that would be in about 5 years time). Considering that all means of production will then indeed be in the hands of a very small number of people with the vast majority of the population cut out of the loop, one would indeed need to wonder how our society is going to look like then. |
| Jun19-12, 04:33 AM | #68 |
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One thing is that just because it's a bad system, doesn't mean that it's not sustainable. I can imagine a society in which 20% of the people do "useful stuff" and the remaining 80% end up as lawyers that just sue each other. Personally, I'd prefer "planting flags on other planets" useless rather than "make work suing each other" useless. |
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