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Friday, March 4, 2011

Fall of Capitalism; Reason & Remedy

There is a growing sense that capitalism is failing.
For years, society equated capitalism with a better future. People wanted to generate wealth for themselves and create a better life for their children. Progressive societies recognized that only businesses can create wealth.
However, there are many negative consequences resulting from a market system, such as fears, insecurities, and inequalities. And now this is clear that the capitalist system is failing.
There are real questions about the legitimacy and integrity of a system where executives make, on average, 350 times more than the lowest-paid workers. Making hundreds of millions of dollars seems immoral in a society where people are living in poverty. Today, in a time when governments are becoming so involved in the financial world there is increased push-back on high executive pay.
Another reason for the perception of failure is that in many countries, when citizens pay taxes, the money is used to pay off the country's debt. It is not used to invest in the well-being of its citizens by building schools or improving the health care system.
In Sir Ronald Cohen's view, market capitalism will ultimately be judged by the reaction of the business sector and public sector to the human problems caused by today's crisis. If steps are not quickly taken to improve the social consequences that affect huge portions of the population, the backlash against capitalism will be serious.
The capitalist system must change and help to support a safety net for workers.
All of the problems associated with capitalism have worsened with globalization. Workers from one country now compete with workers all over the world. In this environment of job insecurity, the safety net for the working class is nonexistent.
There is no process to help individuals through a job loss in a capitalistic system.
Moving forward, if the capitalist system is going to exist, many aspects will have to change. This includes insurance, pensions, and training. These are all areas where the business community has an important voice and can make a difference.
Social entrepreneurship is coming of age, but must be developed into a formal profession.
Business entrepreneurship is the most powerful way of creating wealth for the population. Using the same principles, social entrepreneurship provides a fresh approach to addressing some of society's greatest problems.
There is a close correlation between economic prosperity and social cohesion. Investments are never made in poor areas. As a result, there are few opportunities. Studies show that when less than 5% of the people in an area are positive role models, the area spirals down into crime and violence. It is crucial to provide opportunity to these areas and to do so in intelligent ways, using replicable, sustainable, and scalable models.
The time has come to develop social entrepreneurship into a formal profession and to create institutions to support social entrepreneurship. Social venture funds could become a significant element of private equity investment and entrepreneurial finance. For these sorts of institutions to succeed, talent needs to be attracted into the social entrepreneurship arena.
Social investment is the way for people with business backgrounds to show that business principles can serve as a multiplier for philanthropy.
In addition to social entrepreneurship, broad-reaching public policies are needed.
While social entrepreneurship is important, the small-scale successes of social entrepreneurship will not on their own have a large enough impact on society. In addition to the efforts of social entrepreneurship, broad-reaching public policy is needed to make society's fundamental systems, like education and health care, work more effectively. (When people discuss policies and reforms, they often focus on the poor.)
However, one of the barriers to the implementation of public policies to address the negative consequences of market capitalism is that such policies are often not widely supported by the business community. Too often, members of the business community are narrowly focused on advancing the specific issues relevant to their own short-term interests. They push to lower taxes, pursue specific tax breaks, or lobby for a particular issue. In these ways, business actually makes it more difficult to address society's larger, long-term interests.
The business community and business leaders must acknowledge the need for public policy to address the issues that threaten the future of capitalism. Businesses must look beyond their narrow, short-term interests toward what is good for society and for their businesses in the longer term.
There are many ways businesses can address social problems, while still satisfying their own self-interest.
Businesses should seek profit opportunities in places that also make a broad societal contribution. By employing a lens that focuses on doing well (financially) by doing good (for society), many attractive opportunities are likely to be discovered. Specific examples include:
Employing the disadvantaged. Businesses are uniquely positioned to create independence for people through jobs. When the government provides unemployment benefits, it creates dependency instead of giving people a chance. Some companies have elected to locate in economically troubled areas. In many cases, they find workers who are better and lower-cost than if the business were located in a "fashionable" place to live.

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