>Until people go to jail for the crimes (see Iceland) nothing will get fixed.
This is such a bizarre argument. You don't think there were/are oodles of prosecutors frothing at the mouth to throw some bankers in jail? Look around the internet! They'd be heroes! The public would rejoice, yet it hasn't happened, because proving that some of the perceived corruption and missteps are actual crimes is, apparently, more difficult than you think. And I don't want to live in a country when the government can decide, willy-nilly, to throw corporate executives in the slammer.
Second, tthrowing here are far more effective means of "punishment" than some low-ranking employee in white-collar prison (which costs us MORE money). Fines have been used, which punish earnings, executive pay, and shareholders.
This is such a bizarre argument. You don't think there were/are oodles of prosecutors frothing at the mouth to throw some bankers in jail? Look around the internet! They'd be heroes! The public would rejoice, yet it hasn't happened, because proving that some of the perceived corruption and missteps are actual crimes is, apparently, more difficult than you think. And I don't want to live in a country when the government can decide, willy-nilly, to throw corporate executives in the slammer.
Second, tthrowing here are far more effective means of "punishment" than some low-ranking employee in white-collar prison (which costs us MORE money). Fines have been used, which punish earnings, executive pay, and shareholders.