NOPE! No - no - no... shareholders are VERY rarely held responsible... if ever.
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And if you'll recall in each of the investigations of "accounting irregularities" or corporate malfeasance that have come up in the last decade, the ceos have claimed not to have had any idea what was going on in their companies.
How much economic value can that be given that they are claiming to know nothing about their companies actual operations?
You really want to reconsider that question in light of years of downsizing.
America was in a mini-depression in the 1950s. GM probably employed more workers in the 1950s than today.
And you're right, shareholders are not held responsible for negligence. Perhaps they should be?
Actually if you start by googling 'robber barons' you'll see that this isn't anything 'new'. The reason we are going around in circles is because Eve said, Have a bite of this apple", and Adam said, "Don't mind if I do." Been going around in circles ever since and will until '"that day."
Inflation didn't really hit bad until Lyndon Johnson tried to have 'guns and butter' by financing the Viet Nam war and the "Great Society" in the 1960s. By the late '60s it was off and running. The '50s were relatively stable ..... at least that is the way I remember it.