The concentration of corporate power is driving us
toward catastrophe. We need new organizational
models that serve the common good.
By David KortenMarch 09, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - We live in a world in
extreme crisis. By the estimates of the
Global Footprint Network, the human species
currently consumes at a rate 1.7 times what Earth’s
regenerative systems can sustain. Yet billions of
people face a daily struggle for survival that
strips them of happiness and fulfillment of their
human potential.
A growing concentration of financial wealth puts
ever more political power in the hands of fewer and
fewer people. According to
Oxfam, twenty-six billionaires now hold personal
financial assets greater than those of the poorest
half of humanity (3.9 billion people).
This rapidly accelerating environmental and
social crisis is a direct and predictable
consequence of global rules that facilitate a
concentration of economic and political power in
corporations—rules that provide minimum
accountability for the consequences of how they use
that power to monopolize markets, evade taxes, and
operate in whatever place offers the cheapest labor
and least environmental protections.
As Allen White has correctly
noted, appeals to corporations to exercise
conscientious self-regulation do not work. The
reason is simple. Mentally healthy living humans
have a conscience. Corporations are constructs of
law. They have no conscience beyond whatever
responsibilities the law may require of them—backed
by strict enforcement.
Corporations that are under the control of
individual humans—rather than the financial
markets—may act responsibly when those individuals
possess a deep concern for the common good. Such
corporations, however, are rare – at least among
those of any consequential size.