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Loading... The Mouse on Wall Streetby Leonard Wibberley
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Belongs to SeriesGrand Fenwick (3) Notable Lists
Gloriana XII-The Original Wolf of Wall Street. Grand Fenwick is at it again, this time upsetting the world's economy. The tiny country's secret weapon this time is its Grand Pinot chewing gum. When sales boom during an anti-smoking campaign, Grand Fenwick's investment is suddenly worth millions. In an attempt to rid Grand Fenwick of its crippling budget surplus, Duchess Gloriana XII decides the stock market is the perfect place to lose it all. Instead, she makes millions more and ends up wreaking havoc on the world economy. Never has the money game been more deliciously exposed than in this ingenious satire. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.5Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The book seems to be trying to teach the reader something about national finance and investment, but I'm not sure whether this a primary aim or just a side-effect. Furthermore, as I'm no expert on these subjects, I can't say whether the teaching is sound; but I have my doubts.
Mountjoy dismisses the idea of using the surplus income to eliminate taxes by claiming that the people would lose interest in government if they didn't have to pay for it. But government would surely continue to rule over and have effects on people; if that doesn't motivate them to take an interest, I doubt that paying taxes would, either. If I were running a country and found myself with a large surplus income, I'd see the elimination of taxes as a most pleasant duty. Think how much effort would be saved nationwide if no-one had to assess, collect, pay, or struggle to avoid paying taxes.
The point is frequently made, particularly by Mountjoy, that a large surplus of money is damaging to Grand Fenwick (or, by extension, to any country), and that the best thing to do is to get rid of the embarrassing surplus somehow.
I'm afraid I remain naïvely keen on the prospect of an embarrassingly large surplus of money. It gives you possibilities, and you can do what you please with them. You can of course spend the money unwisely and end up less happy than you were before; in which case, more fool you.
To throw money away because you're afraid of spending it unwisely strikes me as a very defeatist attitude, unless frugal living is part of your religion or personal philosophy. I'm not sure whether Wibberley intended to advocate this seriously, or whether he argued it with tongue in cheek, for comic effect. ( )