People who work in financial services don't have one shred of concern about the well-being of the people they serve. They're only interested in themselves.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The financial industry is a service industry. It should serve others before it serves itself.
People employed in financial institutions are rarely interesting and even more rarely likable.
Because bankers measure their self-worth in money, and pay themselves a lot of it, they think they're fine fellows and don't need to explain themselves.
Families rely on financial services more than ever, but those who need them most - who struggle to make ends meet - too often must contend with sky-high interest rates and tricks and traps buried in the fine print of their loan products.
Remember that all financial markets are filled with good but not necessarily innocent people looking after their own self-interests before they look after yours.
It's very, very hard to be generous and compassionate if you haven't got a dollar in you back pocket to pay for it, to actually pay for those services that people need.
Of course, bankers were always interested in making money. But when bankers had clients, they bore some responsibility for the clients' welfare.
A lot of wealthy people, they don't realize they have the alternatives of spending the money for good.
Unfortunately, the weaker people are, the more they pay, and the stronger they are, the less they pay - when it comes to banking, commission and management fees, and in every area of our lives.
Quite frankly, the financial community has to improve its image. The financial community has to be much more transparent than it is.
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