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By Sir John Whitmore TIME WAS UP for communism
when the Berlin Wall came down. Walls are unambiguous symbols of fear and control,
whether they are intended to keep people in or keep them out. Time is now running
out for capitalism too, and it is ironic that Wall Street is one of its main homes.
For many, the possibility that capitalism is just another failure of communist
proportions is unthinkable. So how well or how badly does capitalism
work now, and by what criteria should it be judged? In simple relativistic terms,
it works better than communism by most standards. However, if you believe that
Soviet communism was worse than capitalism in every way, just ask rural Russian
workers today, or the many victims of recent crime in Moscow. But undoubtedly
capitalism does work - for half the world: the rich half. Any system that encourages
competitive greed will create wealth, and will spawn considerable benefits such
as innovative technology, new medicines, cheaper consumer products and the like.
In absolute terms, however, capitalism is an obscene failure. We have
a world in which 40,000 people die every day for lack of basic needs although
surplus exists; our habitat and countless species are being destroyed at an alarming
rate by commercial exploitation; wars are fought over the desire to control natural
resources. Capitalism makes lethal weaponry available to all, tears down our rainforests
and deprives the thirsty of their water rights - all for profit. Furthermore,
a recent survey showed us that six out of every ten people who work within the
capitalist system are miserable. Yes; let's face it, capitalism is a failure,
a miserable failure. However, horrendous as those things are, they are
but the short-term manifestations of an even more serious long-term malaise. All-consuming
consumerism has brought the psycho-spiritual evolutionary journey of Western man
and woman to a standstill, or even into regression, in a few decades. Through
the glorification of material excess as the ultimate goal in life, and by rewarding
effort for gain rather than for good, people are led into the 'never-enough' disappointment
trap. The illusion of progress, the numbing and dumbing of human development,
and the diminishing of the human spirit have been foisted on us, and especially
on our children, by the priests and profits of capitalism. We are stuck
at the level of quantitative material gain, and neglect qualitative living and
learning. We have acquired much technical knowledge from and for our material
advancement, but we have lost the wisdom to deploy it well. Unscrupulous Western
businesses promote the pointless acquisition of excess, of the frivolous, of over-priced
branded goods manufactured in far-away places by children working punitive hours
in shocking conditions for a pittance. More alarming still is that it may be the
best job they can get. To secure a market, poorer countries are compelled
to sell their natural resources abroad too cheaply, and those that toil to harvest
them go hungry, while comparable growers in the rich countries receive government
subsidies. These are nothing less than crimes perpetrated by the arrogant upon
the ignorant and innocent. Political and corporate leaders, along with the silent
majority by whose apathy their actions are condoned, suffer from a blend of myopia
and denial of epidemic proportions. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTION of denial
is to enable us to retain the capacity to act in the face of crisis for our own
survival. Denial is the way leaders manage the guilt that they would otherwise
feel for their duplicity. They deny the inequity that abounds in our world; they
deny global environmental degradation. Corporate leaders deny personal responsibility
for any of it, claiming that is the job of politicians, and that CEOs are charged
with maximising shareholder value by law. Yet half of the largest economies in
the world are corporations, not countries, and with power comes responsibility
- unless one is in denial. Denial enables us to sustain the creed of greed we
know as capitalism. The political and corporate leadership, and half the population
of the US, live in isolated ignorance of the real world and promote their way
of life as the answer for, and the envy of, the rest of the world. Sadly, millions
of starry-eyed emerging consumers in non-industrialised countries are destined
to fall for it now - and pay for it later. Greed is not new. It pre-existed
capitalism by millennia. It just shows up in even sharper relief at a particular
stage of social evolution. This assertive/competitive state of consciousness is
the fuel that drives individuals and businesses to strive for ever more and ever
bigger. This stage is best described as the need for status and recognition, and
naturally we have an economic system commensurate with that need. Capitalism glorifies
it, such that it becomes our way of life, and keeps people stuck there. They see
it as an end in itself, rather than as the passing level of immaturity that it
reflects. This was accentuated when the Berlin Wall fell, since, in simplistic
dualistic thinking, some people became convinced that capitalism was indeed the
right or the best social structure for the world from then on. A basic
understanding of the evolutionary process should tell us that it is time to move
on up to the next level, now the current system has become obsolete and the harm
it is doing is intolerable for much of the world. Capitalism was invented in the
West for Westerners and it offered riches to others who joined the club. It soon
became so pervasive and dominant that other cultures were obliged to abandon their
own evolutionary choices and adopt the Western system or die. Many of them die
anyway, for Western capitalism does little to feed them: it serves Westerners
first. Communism was seen as the only alternative, and it had some appeal as a
collective counterweight to self-serving capitalism, but, at least in the way
it was imposed and malpractised in the Soviet Union, it was doomed anyway.
In his book Natural Capitalism, Paul Hawken seeks to give capitalism a makeover
by pointing out that it does not meet its own stated intent of free-market economics.
However, he points out, if restructured to do so, if certain products and policies
were not subsidised, if sustainability costs were factored in, and if future generations
were to be considered, most of our harmful actions would be too costly and therefore
would not occur. Others point to certain capitalists like Ricardo Semler of Semco
and Ray Anderson of Interface who are doing very well by doing good, but claim
that people like them will always be the exception. Not necessarily so, says Frank
Dixon, the leading advocate of Total Corporate Responsibility, who demonstrates
how many corporations could profit hugely by bucking the system and becoming more
ethical, more economical and more ecological. But will they listen?
Many more advocates of change see no hope other than an economic meltdown, an
environmental disaster of huge proportions, social unrest or a war that would
bring the present economic system to a timely end. They hope that a better phoenix
will arise from the ashes of capitalism. If it does, it must not be called capitalism,
for that would perpetuate the obsolete definition. Capitalism and communism are
no longer 'isms', but 'wasms', both. 'Human capital', 'natural capital', 'human
assets', 'triple bottom line' are phrases which serve to legitimise the ethically
illegitimate. When we change the language, we change our thinking, we reframe
our perception, we shed past concepts and we are obliged to create anew.
Capitalism has spawned its own language that disguises many uncomfortable
truths. What are investors if they are not gamblers? What are tobacco executives
guilty of, if not genocide? - for at 9,000 deaths a day they match the peak death
rate of Auschwitz. For 'collateral damage', read 'civilian casualties'; for 'advertising'
and 'public relations' read 'manipulation', for 'consumer', read 'dupe', and for
a contradiction in terms, try 'business ethics'. Denial drives us to sanitise
our language, while uncompromising terminology forces us to face reality. It is
time for us to shed our denial, our dismissal, and our discomfort with hard talk
about a hard subject. It is time for us to engage, debate and create a better
future for all. What we Need
WHAT WE NEED is an economy that is in service to people; that enables all six
and a half billion of us to exchange goods and services to the equitable benefit
of all. Under capitalism, ordinary people are in service to the economy, subservient
to it or even expendable. Such compliance should only be expected if the economy
were truly for the common good; but it isn't. We have the right to demand a fundamental
reversal of priority that changes the nature and the purpose of the economy to
one that places people and our planet at the hub of life, not pounds and profit.
Such a shift would de facto spell the end of capitalism as we know it.
A number of visionaries over the ages have anticipated a new economic order. Marx
was badly misinterpreted; Mahatma Gandhi spoke of localised economy, decentralisation,
self-organising and self-management; more recently Muhammad Yunus founded the
Grameen Bank, the first successful model for microcredit worldwide. Today Bernard
Lietaer is one of the leading innovators on the subject of new economic systems.
Their contributions are all important. However, the new socio-economic order will
be designed neither by one visionary nor by a team of social engineers; nor will
it be adopted as a finished product. It will emerge and evolve from
the will and creativity of ordinary people as society as a whole gradually moves
towards self-belief and then self-actualisation. At these levels people's tastes
become more utilitarian as they no longer have to prove themselves by material
or power display. At the same time their vision broadens and their focus turns
from self towards the needs of others and the desire to make a contribution to
society and all of life. The emerging socio-economic order will be designed for
and commensurate with the expression of inclusive, caring and collaborative values.
IN MY WORK, I meet more and more business people who secretly despise
the system they are a part of, who deplore the lack of corporate values, who know
their products and services are of little consequence, and who would love to be
out of it and do something more meaningful; but they have a mortgage and a Mercedes
to service, and two point four children in private education who would feel deprived
and vulnerable without the latest in brand-name clothing that their peers all
parade in. It takes courage to step out of the line - more than most can muster.
So they don their suit and tie and serve the system, but they glance more often
out of the window. The spirit is stirring in such people, and they are increasingly
asking themselves tough questions. There is however an anomaly here.
Those who occupy leadership roles, under the old rules, are all too often the
power hungry, the fear-driven control freaks, and the insecure who have something
to prove. Bosses are often less mature than the community they govern and employ,
and consequently they lose respect and control. Their fear and denial increase,
as do their autocratic ways, their arrogance, and their isolation from reality.
This is so apparent today among our political and corporate leaders. The capitalist
system on which their authority stood is breaking up like an ice-cap under global
warming, and they are left floating, disconnected, unstable and fearful, while
ordinary people, with less invested in old illusions, seek to build bridges.
Denial and Demise,
Capitalism is a flawed economic order that is palpably failing humanity. Is it
curable? Resurgence Magazine, May 05 |