Topic: Kodak, a demonstration of Capitalism
If you do not know Kodak is contemplating bankruptcy.
This company used to be one of the most profitable in the world, with market share many would envy.
Their name was synonymous with technology development, customer satisfaction, employee benefits, and more.
Their fall is a story of not changing or adapting to the times.
While they tried spinning into printer ink, they came out to late for good market share.
Their pensions is the main cost dragging them under.
They have some value left of course... they have an Intellectual Property trove, they have infrastructure, they still make profits on their products (just not enough to cover their legacy costs)
So this great company shall fall until it hits bottom. The CEO cannot hope for a better job, he ruined a legendary company.
Ultimately the value will drop until all assets are sold and bankruptcy happens. Then it will be gone.
The moral of the story is that if competition exists, big companies can fail. In this case competition was new technologies exploited by others. Old school camera film versus digital is not even a good comparison now.
However when you go with big companies, and prevent competition, then you are left with no real gains.
Want an example? Look at Russian auto manufactoring. Protected, no serious competition (made very difficult), monopolistic... they make a car you only could love if they melted you from a block of ice you had been in for a thousand years.
When you go the way of big government regulations the same happens.
Proof?
Look at the land line telephone system. What new technologies have they made to convince us to keep buying their product? None.
Why? Because they commonly have a monopoly over a region, with such tight oversight that new technologies cannot be incorporated. The video phone was to revolutionize our lives... killed due to fiefdoms and regulations.
Capitalism shreds the weak, it rewards who offer a better product, better service, cheaper costs, and/or better marketing. If we have as near to true capitalism as we can, we would see companies make high priced items low priced, through innovation and cost cutting, just to keep a portion of the market.
When even the poor can buy a Testerosa (which means the rich will buy aircars, cars that drive themselves, or some new higher standard of luxury) due to changes in the market, then the feeling of equality socialists so desire and crave can happen, while fulfilling the dreams of Conservatives.
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)