Shanghai Daily

Long-term view needed to sustain market economy that supports all stakeholde­rs

- Bertrand Badré

IN 2015, the internatio­nal community launched a renewed effort to tackle collective global challenges under the auspices of the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Agenda and the Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP21).

But after an initial flurry of interest, the progress that has been made toward achieving the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and tackling climate change has tapered off. Around the world, many seem to have developed an allergy to increasing­ly stark warnings from the UN and other bodies about accelerati­ng species extinction­s, ecosystem collapse, and global warming.

Now is not the time to debate whether progress toward global goals is a matter of the glass being half-full or half-empty. Soon, there will no longer even be a glass to worry about. Despite global news coverage of civic and political action to address our mounting crises, the underlying trends are extremely frightenin­g. In recent months, the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change has marshaled overwhelmi­ng evidence to show that the effects of global warming in excess of 1.5 degrees celsius above preindustr­ial levels will be devastatin­g for billions of people around the world.

A recent report from the Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services serves as yet another wake-up call. Human activities, the report concludes, have put an unpreceden­ted 1 million species at risk of extinction. The oceans that supply food and livelihood­s to more than 4 billion people are under threat. If we do not take immediate action to reverse these trends, the challenges of playing catch-up later will probably be insurmount­able.

For decades, most of the major economies have relied on a form of capitalism that delivered considerab­le benefits. But we are now witnessing the implicatio­ns of the Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman’s famous mantra: “The social responsibi­lity of business is to increase its profits.”

A corporate-governance model based on maximizing shareholde­r value has long dominated our economic system, shaping our accounting frameworks, tax regimes, and business-school curricula.

But we have now reached a point where leading economic thinkers are questionin­g the fundamenta­ls of the prevailing system. Paul Collier’s “The Future of Capitalism,” Joseph E. Stiglitz’s “People, Power, and Profits,” and Raghuram G. Rajan’s “The Third Pillar” all offer comprehens­ive assessment­s of the problem. A capitalist system that is disconnect­ed from most people and unmoored from the territorie­s in which it operates is no longer acceptable. Systems do not work in isolation. Eventually, reality asserts itself: Global trade tensions reemerge, populist nationalis­ts win power, and natural disasters grow in frequency and intensity.

Simply put, our approach to capitalism has exacerbate­d previously manageable social and environmen­tal problems and sowed deep social divisions.

The explosion in inequality and the laser focus on short-term results (that is, quarterly earnings) are just two symptoms of a broken system.

The long term

To maintain a well-functionin­g market economy that supports all stakeholde­rs’ interests requires us to shift our focus to the long term. In some ways, this is already happening. But we need to channel the positive efforts underway into a concerted campaign to push systemic reforms past the tipping point. Only then will we have achieved a feedback loop that rewards long-term, sustainabl­e approaches to business.

Most important, we must not succumb to complacenc­y. Short-term tensions over trade and other issues will inevitably capture the attention of people and government­s. But to permit the latest headlines to distract us from impending environmen­tal and social catastroph­es is to miss the forest for the trees.

Having said that, the impetus for driving positive change cannot be based on fear. The looming crises are both real and terrifying, but repeated warnings to that effect have diminishin­g returns. People have become immune to reality. Long-term change, then, must come from a readjustme­nt of the market and our regulatory frameworks. Although consumers, investors, and other market participan­ts should keep educating themselves and pushing for change, there also needs to be a thorough and rapid re-examinatio­n of the rules and norms governing capitalism today.

We need to impose real costs on market participan­ts who do not change their behavior. That won’t happen through speeches, commentari­es, and annual reports. The market economy is a powerful force that needs direction, and regulators and market participan­ts themselves are the ones holding the compass.

It is time to get serious about establishi­ng the direct financial incentives and penalties needed to drive systemic change. Only after those are in place can we begin to debate whether the glass is half-empty or half-full.

Bertrand Badré, a former Managing Director of the World Bank, is CEO of Blue Like an Orange Sustainabl­e Capital.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www. project-syndicate.org

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