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Repurposing the Economy Can Help Stem the Tide of Terror

August 17, 2016 - 9:00am

In the immediate aftermath of World War II the German state of Bavaria wrote a new  constitution stating that all economic activity should serve the common good.  This was a direct response to the fascism that triggered the war, the Great Depression that gave rise to fascism and the laissez-faire economic and financial system that brought on the Great Depression.

But Bavaria was no pioneer in advocating for the common good: promoting general welfare is one of the bases of the United States constitution, stated in the preamble. 

Today, as we contemplate the terror and violence infecting our world from France, Brussels and Bangladesh to Orlando and Dallas, the parallel with the common good cannot be ignored.  Over the last three decades, we have collectively failed to make promoting general welfare a priority, choosing instead to support globalized financial capitalism which aims to maximize opportunities for self-interested speculators eyeing profit, bonuses and privileges for large corporations and the global elite who control them -- the same set of elite that’s prepared to wage war in order to the secure natural resources.

It’s no secret that the winners have become more powerful and the losers have become ever more frustrated and disaffected.

To a certain extent, society can handle inequality and the resulting marginalization.  But what about when that threshold is surpassed?  As we are now witnessing, those who’ve been or who feel left behind, those who are left without without opportunities or hope, lash out with aggression and violence. 

Thus, today, we are paying the price in fear and bloodshed of having forgotten the lessons embedded in the Second World War’s inception.

But it’s not too late.  The growing outcry against inequality, the vociferous calls for fair trade instead of free trade and human rights instead of corporate rights as we’ve seen through the Bernie Sanders movement among others suggests that the tides can -- and may well -- change.  It won’t happen overnight, but with the right level of commitment to re-purposing our global economy through the following initiatives, we can help it take root:

  •  A fundamental redefinition of economic success based on an organization’s contribution to the common good.
  • To this end, the adoption of a “Common Good Balance Sheet“ for transnational corporations as a condition for accessing global markets. A first attempt at proposing such guidelines was made in the early 2000s by the United Nations, which drafted the “Draft Norms on the Responsibilities of Transnational Corporations and Other Business Enterprises with Regard to Human Rights.”  This was rejected by business associations and western governments.  Now, a better and already widely used instrument - the Common Good Balance Sheet – is available and with the right backing, could become legislation under international law.
  •  The shifting of investment finance priorities from profit goals to common good goals drawing on The Common Good Balance Sheet.
  •  The long-overdue fulfillment of the 0.7 target whereby 0.7 percent of rich countries respective GNPs would be donated to development assistance through the United Nations.
  • The payment by rich countries of their outstanding balances due to the United Nations.
  • A cap on the amount of private wealth that can be held by individuals.
  • The shifting of priorities from forging international trade deals favoring corporate profit over the welfare of all to taking joint initiatives that support global cooperation, solidarity, sustainability and peace work.

The challenge could not be bigger -- or more urgent.  Corporations who view their primary responsibility as serving shareholders are the first who’ll need to step up to the plate and consider what entrepreneurial strategies and forms of cooperation will help those who’ve been excluded from the global economy to find opportunities and their place within it.   Governments will need to look at policy instruments such as the Common Good Balance Sheet to support an agenda of human welfare and development rather than a corporate bill of rights.

In sending a clear message through our actions that we’re serious about focusing on a common good economy, on local development and sustainability, on fair trade and the strengthening of refugee, poverty reduction and peace programs, we will see the preachers of hatred, revenge and divide would lose their arguments and their targets one by one.

Christian Felber is founder of the The Economy For The Common Good based in Austria and the author of 15 books, including, most recently, Change Everything: Creating an Economy For The Common Good (Zed Books-UK, 2015; distributed in the U.S. by the University of Chicago Press).

Comments

"Re purposing" One never hears that drivel outside a Government sponsored symposium.. See the article about the bear problem and feeding thee wildlife. They forget how to hunt (work for it) and become increasingly dependent on other people's food. And, as LBJ promised, they'll be voting democrat for the next 200 years. I think the author would consider the MAKERS the bad guys and the TAKERS as the victims.

Well, Tom you seemed to have not understood Christians points or you understand them clearly and are the expression of a materialist capitalist who is all about himself. Christians model shares economic success with all of humanity so we all succeed. Where typical capitalistic markets and thinking that share nothing with anyone but itself. Its all about ME! I'm sure you see the difference so it appears you are only for yourself. He speaks about EVERYONE. IT'S ABOUT SHARING NOT BEING SELFISH. Sorry you are what you think.

It has become about everything, except what the founding father's intended, and that is government, of the people, by the people and for the people. Until we get back to that, we will continue to see more of the same...sadly.

Too much money, controlled by too few entities that would rather move money around in today's world play money casino rather than put it to useful, long term work. This is a good start. FDR knew how to get it right.

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