¶ … business and professional ethics in the movie "Wall Street." Discussed are the ethical principles that are violated as related to business; how greed is presented as part of American business; Gecko's view; how Buddy reacts and deals with the issues of ethics; how Buddy's view of greed and ethics evolves and changes throughout the film; what is/are the ethical dilemmas he faces and how does he handle them.
Wall Street, the Movie
Capitalism is said to be the path to the American dream. The barons of the early twentieth century built empires, the majority of which remain major players in the corporate world today. The goal of a capitalist is to make the best product for maximum profit and at the same time sell it at a competitive price to give the consumer the best buy, thus, acing out market competitors. The force behind this is basically self-interest. The American dream of the barons was one of the future, to create and build businesses that would not only dominate their perspective markets of the day, but businesses that would continue to grow, providing wealth and security for future generations. However, this Adam Smith view of capitalism took a turn in the deregulated financial climate of the 1980's when junk bond trading was at its peak. Then the capitalist motto seemed to become the epitome of the 'me' generation, to hell with anyone else, profits at all cost. Gordon Gekko, the financial wheeler-dealer giant in Oliver Stone's 1987 movie "Wall Street," summed it up brilliantly when he said, "Greed is good" (Stone 1987). Gekko represented the mood of the times, when financial hustlers made fortunes ruthlessly buying and selling company stocks, controlling markets, often by unscrupulous means. It gave a whole new meaning to capitalist force of self-interest.
Bud Fox, the naive American...
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