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Signpost for the future
THE POST-CORPORATE WORLD - Life after capitalism: David C.
Korten; Viva Books Private Ltd., 4262/3, Ansari Road, Daryaganj,
New Delhi-110002. Rs. 595.
THE BOOK under review is not an ordinary, run-of-the-mill book on
economics or management. It is a thought-provoking and epoch-
making volume, which questions and quite often shatters the
fundamental principles on which modern trade and commerce
function and flourish. The author believes in, and brings forward
the concept that capitalism is at the root of some basic
inequities and injustice prevalent in our society.
According to him, in the 1980s capitalism triumphed over
communism. The USSR disintegrated, and a federation of
independent states came into existence. In the 1990s capitalism
triumphed over economic democracy, and the free market economy.
For those of us who grew up believing that capitalism is the
cornerstone of democracy and market freedom, it has been a rude
shock to realise that under capitalism, democracy is for sale to
the highest bidder; and that the market is centrally controlled
and manoeuvred by multinational corporations, some of which are
larger than the smaller nation states in the world.
The votaries of capitalism intimidate the innocent and innocuous
citizen saying that there is no alternative for him - ``TINA'',
as Margaret Thatcher would say - the acronym stands for There Is
No Alternative. The citizen, of necessity, must submit to the
forces of economic globalisation (or economic imperialism).
Although the book under review can stand on its own feet, and
deliver the message which the author wants to convey, in many
respects it is a continuation of his earlier volume ``When
Corporations Rule the World''. According to the author, the
corporates are driven by a single-minded desire to generate ever
greater profits for the benefit of their investors; and towards
this they have converted their economic power into political
power; they dominate the decision processes of governments, and
rewrite the rules of international commerce. The writ of the
commercial tycoons runs with the political parties, because the
parties depend very heavily on the funds from the corporations to
earn their franchise to rule the country.
The corporate captains may want us to appreciate that they are
legally bound and obligated to improving the wealth of their
shareholders; that the invisible hand of the laissez-faire
economy will ipso facto translate their seemingly self-seeking
endeavours into public good. Unfortunately, however, it does not
happen so, because they are not operating in a free market
economy, but in a capitalist and controlled economy, whose hand
is neither invisible nor benevolent.
There is yet another myth which the author explodes in this
context. It is proclaimed that innumerable investors hold shares
in the business houses, and that all of them will benefit
directly from the increase in the value of stocks. Of all the
countries in the world, perhaps the U.S. has the broadest
participation in stock ownership which can, therefore, serve as
an example. Just five per cent of the families in the U.S. own 77
per cent of the shareholder wealth in that country. Globally, the
participation in corporate shares is perhaps confined to less
than one per cent of the total population. In other words, the
triumph and tyranny of capitalism is such that the world's
largest economies operate for the primary benefit of the one per
cent wealthiest people on this planet.
Free market economy is a remarkable and self-regulating
phenomenon for aggregating the choices of several individuals, so
that an efficient and equitable allocation of productive
resources are achieved to meet the overall human consumption.
Recognising this unique power of the market, the corporate
captains contrive to cloak their dialogue in the market rhetoric,
while they have their own private agenda operating all the time.
Those who believe that there is more to life than making money,
than shopping in supermarkets for products we did not know we
needed until we saw them advertised on the television, this trend
of events is demeaning and dehumanising. But then, what is the
solution for this dangerous situation? What kind of actions
should we take in order to direct our destiny on the right track?
We have reached a crisis point that presents us with the
opportunity and the necessity to take conscious responsibility
for our evangelical role in this context. ``Resolving the crisis
depends on civil societies mobilising to reclaim the power that
corporations and global financial markets have usurped. Our best
hope for the future lies with locally owned and managed economies
that rely predominantly on local resources to meet the livelihood
needs of their members in ways that maintain a balance with the
earth.'' This is the sum and substance of the thesis that the
author advances in this book.
It is divided into four parts. Part one, consisting of three
chapters, tells the story of how a perfectly and precisely
organised universe has been captured, enslaved and endangered by
man for meeting his self-centered purposes by using money and
capitalism as the ways and means.
Part two again has three chapters, in which the larger story of
life during the 15 billion-year cosmic journey right up to the
present moment is described and discussed. It shares insights
from the new biology, which reveals life's inherent capacity to
organise itself in several ways to meet the needs of both the
individual and the community.
Next part subtitled ``Envisioning a post-corporate world'',
examines in four chapters and at length, the nature of the
institutional and policy decisions we ought to take in order to
eschew ``the economic pathology that plagues us'' and instead
create a truly democratic, market-oriented, and life-centered
economy - locally, nationally and internationally.
The last part, ``Coming home to life'', has four chapters in
which the author takes a critical look at the processes already
at work to bring about a metamorphosis. The objective is to
create an altogether new civilisation, which will be able to
function in harmony and balance, and get along with other organic
systems in the world.
R. DEVARAJAN
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