For The
Love Of Money
The following is based on
When Corporations Rule the
World - 2nd Edition
By
David C. Korten
21/09/08 "PCDF" -- -
Those of us who seek to intervene in policy debates in favor of
economic justice and environmentally sustainability are
regularly assured by the world's power brokers that they are
fully committed to these goals so long as economic growth and
the expansion of free trade are not compromised by governmental
restraints on the market. So sacred have growth and free trade
become in our modern culture that only rarely do we find the
courage to ask why they should be given precedence over the
needs of people and nature. Indeed, why should we consider
accelerating growth and trade to be of any importance at all
except to the extent that they serve people and nature?
When the proponents of growth,
market deregulation, and free trade tout their benefits, it is
well to bear in mind what some of the most outspoken of these
proponents really have in mind. Take this account from a recent
issue of Forbes magazine.
As disillusion with
socialism and other forms of statist economics spreads,
private, personal initiative is being released to seek its
destiny. Wealth, naturally, follows. The two big openings
for free enterprise in this decade have come in Latin
America and the Far East. Not surprisingly, the biggest
clusters of new billionaires on our list have risen from the
ferment of these two regions. Eleven new Mexican
billionaires in two years, seven more ethnic Chinese.
Taking a slightly more populist
view, Business Week presented its own special report
titled "A Millionaire a Minute," providing this breathless
account of what the free market has accomplished in Asia.
Wealth.. . . Now East Asia
is generating its own wealth on a speed and scale that
probably is without historical precedent. The number of
non-Japanese Asian multimillionaires is expected to double
to 800,000 by 1996. . . . East Asia will surpass Japan in
purchasing power within a decade. . . . There are new
markets for everything from Mercedes Benz cars to Motorola
mobile phones to Fidelity mutual funds. . . . To find the
nearest precedent, you need to rewind U.S. history 100 years
to the days before strong unions, securities watchdogs and
antitrust laws.
Neither article made more than
passing reference to the 675 million Asians who continue to live
in absolute deprivation. So there we have it. In the eyes of two
leading business journals, economic success is about creating
millionaires and billionaires by denying workers the right to
organize independent unions and giving free reign to securities
fraud and the extraction of monopoly profits.
Most everyone is aware that we
live in an unequal world. Few realize, however, just how extreme
the inequality has become or how fast the gap between the poor
and the super rich is growing. Forbes tells us the world
now has 358 billionaires. Their combined net worth exceeds the
combined net worth of the world's poorest 2½ billion people.
This is but one manifestation of the extreme economic and social
distortions created by the globalized free market economy
idealized by business publications such as Forbes and
Business Week.
Evidence is mounting that
economic growth and free trade are not leading us toward
economic justice and environmental sustainability. To the
contrary, they are taking us in the direction of increasing
economic injustice and environmental unsustainability. The
debates over jobs versus the environment miss a basic point.
Assuring everyone the means to meet their basic needs and
achieving a sustainable balance with the environment are
mutually supportive goals. Indeed, there are powerful
theoretical arguments why, in a resource scarce world, neither
is possible without the other. There is, however, an
irreconcilable conflict between the goal of creating
economically just and environmentally sustainable societies and
embracing sustained economic growth, unregulated markets, and
free trade as the organizing principles of public policy. The
resulting policies are well suited to producing more
millionaires and billionaires. They are ill suited to achieving
justice and sustainability.
THE MONEY GAME
The world's most powerful
instrument of governance is not a government. Nor is it a global
corporation. Rather it is a global financial system that is
running dangerously out of control.
Each day half a million to a
million people--primarily Western Europeans, North Americans,
and Japanese--arise as dawn reaches their part of the world,
turn on their computers, and leave the real world of people,
things, and nature to immerse themselves in playing the world's
most lucrative computer game: the money game. As their computers
come on line, they enter a world of cyberspace constructed of
numbers that represent money and complex rules by which those
numbers can be converted into a seemingly infinite variety of
financial instruments, each with its own distinctive risks and
reproductive qualities. Through their interactions, the players
engage in competitive transactions aimed at acquiring for their
own accounts the money that other players hold.
Players can also pyramid the
amount of money in play by borrowing from one another and
bidding up prices. Indeed, the money game players have been so
successful in creating play money that for every $1 now
circulating in the productive world economy of real goods and
services, it is estimated that there is $20 to $50 circulating
in the world of pure finance--"investment" funds completely
delinked from the creation of real value. In the international
currency markets alone, some $800 billion to $1 trillion changes
hands each day--unrelated to productive investment or trade in
actual goods and services.
Not only is the money game
challenging and fun, the play money it generates can be
exchanged for real money to buy things from people who work in
the real world--lots of things. Unfortunately for the rest of
us, though it is played like a game and the transactions involve
nothing more than moving numbers from one electronic account to
another through a global web of computers, the money game has
enormous real consequences. Take the recent Mexican peso crisis
as an example.
Mexico became touted as an
economic miracle by attracting $70 billion in foreign money over
five years with high interest bonds and a super heated stock
market. As little as 10 percent of this money went into real
investment. Most of it financed consumer imports, capital
flight, and debt service payments. It also helped to create 24
Mexican billionaires. The bubble burst in December of 1994 as
the hot money flowed out. Mexico's stock market and the value of
the peso plummeted. The resulting Mexican austerity measures and
a shifting terms of trade between Mexico and the United States
resulted in massive job losses on both sides of the border. U.S.
president Clinton put together a $50 billion bailout package at
taxpayer expense to assure that the Wall Street firms that held
Mexican bonds would be repaid. The new link between the dollar
and the peso made currency speculators nervous and the value of
the dollar fell sharply against the yen. Not a penny of the
bailout money went to the 750,000 Mexicans who would be put out
of work by government imposed austerity measures or the million
Americans expected to lose their jobs to NAFTA by the end of
1995.
These are real world
consequences of an out of control financial system in which
reckless young traders backed by the massive financial assets of
leading private financial institutions send billions of dollars
sloshing around the world in a high stacks gambling frenzy with
an almost complete absence of oversight.
- At Kidder Peabody, a major
U.S. investment house, a lone trader reported $1.7 trillion
in phony trades over a period of 2½ years before his
superiors noticed anything amiss. During this period he
claimed he had earned the firm $350 million in profits, for
which he was rewarded with an $11 million bonus. Only later
was it found that he had in fact lost the company $85
million on the few trades he had actually made.
- In one month a 28 year old
trader at Barings bank lost $1.3 billion on bad derivatives
bets and forced a venerated 233 year old bank into
bankruptcy.
The global financial system is
wildly out of control and no one is tending the store.
SOCIALIZING COSTS AND
PRIVATIZING GAINS
In a deregulated global market
economy global corporations are accountable to only one master,
a rogue global financial system with one incessant demand--keep
your stock price as high as possible by maximizing short-term
returns. One way to do that is to shift as much of the cost of
the corporation's operations as possible onto the community. The
pressures involved make it almost impossible to manage a
corporation in the larger community interest. Indeed, any
publicly traded corporation that attempts to manage its assets
responsibly will almost certainly be bought out by a corporate
raider.
Take the case of Pacific Lumber
Company. It pioneered the development of sustainable logging
practices on its substantial holdings of ancient redwood timber
stands, provided generous benefits to its employees, fully
funded its pension fund, and maintained a no lay-offs policy
during downturns in the timber market. This made it a good
citizen in the local community. It also made it a prime takeover
target.
Corporate raider Charles Hurwitz
gained control in a hostile takeover. He immediately doubled the
cutting rate of the company's holding of thousand-year-old
trees, reaming a mile and a half corridor into the middle of the
forest that he jeeringly named "Our wildlife-biologist study
trail." He then drained $55 million from the company's $93
million pension fund and invested the remaining $38 million in
annuities of the Executive Life Insurance Company, which had
financed the junk bonds used to make the purchase--and
subsequently failed. Turning reality on its head, corporate
raiders refer to this process of pirating a firm's assets as
"adding value."
Once upon a time local
communities looked to corporations not only as sources of jobs,
but as well of tax revenues to help cover the costs of essential
local infrastructure and public services. For example, in 1957,
corporations in the United States provided 45 percent of local
property tax revenues. By 1987 their share had dropped to about
16 percent.
Indeed, local governments are
now forced by the dynamics of global competition not only to
give most large corporations tax breaks, but as well to directly
subsidize their operations with public funds.
The state of South Carolina in
the United States has been warmly praised by the business press
for its successful competitive bid for a new BMW auto plant. The
company was attracted in part by cheap, nonunion labor and tax
concessions. In addition, when BMW said it favored a 1,000 acre
tract on which a large number of middle class homes were already
located, the state spent $36.6 million to buy the 140 properties
and leased the site back to the company at a $1 a year. The
state also picked up the costs of recruiting, screening, and
training workers for the new plant, and raised an additional
$2.8 million from private sources to send newly hired engineers
for training in Germany. The total cost to the South Carolina
taxpayers for these and other subsidies to attract BMW will
amount to $130 million over thirty years.
This is what global competition
is really about--local communities and workers competing against
one another to absorb ever more of the production costs of the
world's most powerful and profitable corporations.
Another tactic for externalizing
costs is through "downsizing"--a process by which the U.S.
Fortune 500 companies reduced their total employment by 4.4
million jobs between 1980 and 1993--a period during which their
sales increased by 1.4 times, assets increased by 2.3 times, and
CEO compensation increased by 6.1 times. Some observers claim
that downsizing means the largest corporations are losing out to
smaller, more agile and competitive enterprises. The claim has
as much substance as the claim by tobacco company executives
that cigarettes are not addictive.
While the giants are shedding
people, they are not shedding control over money, markets, or
technology. The world's 200 largest industrial corporations,
which employ only one third of one percent of the world's
population, control 25 percent of the world's economic output.
The top 300 transnationals, excluding financial institutions,
own some 25 percent of the world's productive assets. Of the
world's 100 largest economies, 51 are now corporations--not
including banking and financial institutions. The combined
assets of the world's 50 largest commercial banks and
diversified financial companies amount to nearly 60 percent of
The Economist's estimate of a $20 trillion global stock
of productive capital.
Concentration of control over
markets is proceeding apace. The Economist reports that
in the consumer durables, automotive, airline, aerospace,
electronic components, electrical and electronics, and steel
industries the top five firms control more than 50 percent of
the global market, placing them clearly in the category of
monopolistic industries. In the oil, personal computers and
media industries the top five firms control more than 40 percent
of sales, which indicates strong monopolistic tendencies.
Downsizing is really about
consolidating the firm's monopoly control of markets,
technology, and money in a small, well-paid headquarters staff.
Everything else is contracted out to smaller firms that are
forced into intensive competition for the firm's business. The
contractors--commonly located in low wage countries--compete by
hiring workers at substandard wages under often appalling
working conditions.
For example, the popular Nike
athletic shoes that sell for US$73 to $135 around the world are
produced by 75,000 workers employed by independent contractors
in low income countries. A substantial portion of these workers
are in Indonesia--mostly women and girls housed in company
barracks, paid as little as 15 cents an hour, and required to
work mandatory overtime. Unions are forbidden and strikes are
broken up by the military. In 1992, Michael Jordan reportedly
received $20 million from the Nike corporation to promote the
sale of its shoes, more than the total compensation paid to the
Indonesian women who made them.
An unregulated global market is
shifting the financial rewards away from those who do productive
work to those who control money and are successful at convincing
people to buy what they do not need and often cannot afford.
This goes to the heart of growing income disparities around the
world.
The world's most powerful
corporations are also active in shaping public policy in ways
that virtually forces us into a pattern of overconsumption that
yields large profits to themselves at the expense of our quality
of living. Evidence is mounting that to make our societies
sustainable we will have to restructure our systems of
production and consumption to largely eliminate:
- Dependence on personal
automobiles;
- Long distance movement of
goods and people;
- The use of chemicals in
agriculture; and
- The generation of garbage
that we cannot immediately recycle.
In each instance, we have an
opportunity to substantially increase the quality of our living
while reducing our burden on the environment. Why aren't we
doing it? Who wants to give over their living spaces to
automobiles, take long business trips, eat contaminated foods,
or live in a garbage dump?
One important reason we live
this way is because it is profitable for politically powerful
corporations. For example, the steel, automobile, construction,
and oil companies have a major stake in policies that make
survival without an automobile nearly impossible in most of our
towns and cities. Chemical and agribusiness companies have had a
similar stake in maintaining chemical and energy intensive
agriculture systems that provide us with foods of dubious
nutritional value laced with toxic poisons. Other industries
benefit from encouraging our use of excessively packaged low
durability products. So long as these corporate interests are
allowed to dominate public policy processes, change is unlikely.
Global civil society is mobilizing to reclaim the power that
these interests have co-opted.
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