BigBallinStalin wrote:If you're not a free market kinda guy, then imagine the additional burden this policy would place upon small Mom & Pop's shops. It would be another unnecessary regulation.
Correct me if im wrong as I am not that familiar with tax in the US, but, the extra burden of a policy like this isnt going to be very large? Dont you already hire tax accountants or invest in time/effort to gather and analyse the information anyway; the disclosure is the easy bit I would have thought? What extra costs are there?
Besides, that "other information" condition can be serious. If you can see what, when, and where a company is investing (i.e. it is not allowed to protect its trade secrets), then presuming no real harm is being done, then this would be disadvantageous to companies.
I agree that disclosure should always stop short of competitive advantages; but im a big supporter of everything up until that point. The old adage of "the only time you'd be opposed to telling the truth is when you have something to hide" rings true here.
But how is profit, loss and a few generic cost and income buckets going to ruin a companies competitive advantage? I would have thought the policy would be capped at that or did they want to list shit like reciepts and whatnot?
Question:
There's a lot of information already out there on big companies anyway. People just don't care, so what would be the point of this policy, TGD?
Anything in the public domain is mostly voluntary, or something the company isnt bothered about keeping hidden. Therefore its only what the companies want you to see (think of it like marketing; how many cleaning products open with the line "you will need to wear gloves otherwise this product will dissolve your skin" in their commercials).
That means that not only do players have imperfect information on which to make a decision, but that imperfect information is not any way neutral*. Its specifically tailored to make any positive decision appear more rational than it may very well be in reality.
I have no issue at all with policy enforcing transparency as long it draws the line at clear cut competitive advantages (sorry bro, me knowing that you spend 37% of your profits on "research and development" doesnt hurt your competitive advantage).
So its a yes (assuming intelligent implemention) for me... well well, isnt that a surprise; god im even dissapointing myself with my predictability... fml.
* its the neutrality of the imperfect information i have issue with, not the imperfect information in itself, obviously.