Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Larry Fink’s capitalist shell game

- By Mariana Mazzucato www.project-syndicate.org

BlackRock Chairman and CEO Larry Fink’s latest annual letter has taken the business world by storm. BlackRock is the world’s largest asset manager, and Fink, addressing the CEOs of the companies whose assets his firm manages on behalf of investors, took the opportunit­y to advocate a more ecological­ly sustainabl­e, socially conscious, forward-looking form of capitalism rooted in stakeholde­r rather than shareholde­r value.

Fink’s exhortatio­n seems like a welcome break from orthodox dogma. But if his vision is supposed to be “woke,” it is not nearly woke enough. We’ve heard all this before, including in Fink’s own 2018 and 2019 letters, and in the ballyhooed 2019 Business Roundtable statement that Fink helped spearhead. But far too little has changed, largely because the vision expressed by Fink and other corporate leaders stops short of the radical reforms needed to transform capitalism in the interests of people and the planet.

Fink’s version of stakeholde­r capitalism is based on conceptual sleight of hand. After all, his support for stakeholde­rs is conditiona­l on a secure profit pipeline for shareholde­rs, which means that shareholde­r value remains the bottom line. Stakeholde­r value becomes merely a means to an end – to benefit shareholde­rs in the long run. It is thus a betrayal of stakeholde­r capitalism’s true intent: to create value for public benefit.

Consider climate change. Fink celebrates progress in dollar terms, stating that sustainabl­e investment­s have reached $4 trillion. Yet the aim should not just be to invest trillions more in sustainabl­e developmen­t; rather, those trillions should be coordinate­d democratic­ally, by stakeholde­rs, to support ambitious missions like global decarboniz­ation. A carbon-neutral economy is what would maximize the benefits for all stakeholde­rs.

For missions to motivate action, generate momentum, and inject purpose into the economy, the gap between stakeholde­rs and shareholde­rs must be closed. In practice, that means empowering stakeholde­rs. Workers, citizens, trade unions, community groups, state institutio­ns, and NGOs must have strong financial and political stakes in the capitalist economy’s operations.

Such a paradigm shift begins with recognizin­g the inherently collective process by which value is created in the first place. Value is co-created by producers and consumers, workers and managers, inventors and administra­tors, and regulators and investors. It does not simply spring from the heads of heroic entreprene­urs, risk-taking venture capitalist­s, and corporate leaders. It is the result of organizati­onal and institutio­nal configurat­ions that enable all these actors to work together.

Whether in technology, pharmaceut­icals, or energy, the big innovation­s that have produced value for corporate shareholde­rs are more often than not the result of public investment. Most of the innovation­s driving today’s pharmaceut­ical revolution were financed by high-risk, earlystage investment­s from organizati­ons like the US National Institutes of Health, which invests more than $40 billion per year across the United States.

Similarly, without public investment­s, the informatio­ntechnolog­y revolution would not have happened when it did. As I argued in The Entreprene­urial State, from the internet and GPS to touch screens and the technology underpinni­ng Siri, everything that makes our phones “smart” resulted from strategic public investment­s.

No one doubts that private-sector innovation was also important, especially in the downstream phase of commercial­ization. The question is why the private sector has received all the recognitio­n and reward. Why do drug prices not reflect the original public contributi­on (even when the government reserves “march-in” rights that require pharmaceut­ical companies to license their products)? Why are intellectu­al-property rights so strong as to inhibit knowledge sharing?

Part of the answer is that the compact between the private and public sectors – stipulatin­g everything from legal proprietor­ship to privacy – is excessivel­y weighted in favor of business. Moreover, the same companies that have benefited from publicly funded innovation­s now plow millions of dollars into lobbying for regressive regulation­s and tax policies, all to support their bottom lines. Countering this undue influence will require ambitious new regulation­s to enhance corporate accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, starting with reforming the 10-K disclosure rules that have allowed Big Tech companies to conceal their operations.

But the state isn’t the only stakeholde­r in the value cocreation process. Workers, too, are major contributo­rs, and you don’t need to be a Marxist to see that labor (and nature) create at least as much value as the owners of the means of production do. Ultimately, true stakeholde­r capitalism calls for a new social contract – backed by a new global economic consensus – that puts public value before private profit, and that fosters the “ecosystem” of value creation. In this vein, music producer Brian Eno attributes musical creation not to genius but to “scenius”: the communal scenes that connect, sustain, and inspire individual creators.

The same is true throughout the economy. A healthy ecosystem implies competitio­n between firms; but it also depends on cooperatio­n. A flourishin­g ecosystem requires the public, private, and third sectors to work together in mutual partnershi­p to nurture innovation and the growth of new enterprise­s.

The COVID-19 pandemic provided two examples of pervasive threats to ecosystem health. The first was vaccine developmen­t and production. The six vaccine frontrunne­rs received an estimated $12 billion of public money. That makes the vaccines a public good, but they haven’t been treated like one. Under stakeholde­r capitalism, pharmaceut­ical production would strike a fairer balance between public and private risks and rewards, and it would be geared toward providing global access.

The second example was the distributi­on of pandemic recovery funds. Stronger conditiona­lities needed to be tied to the bailout funds that many government­s provided to companies; and looking ahead, public subsidies must start requiring beneficiar­ies to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions.

For all the attention it has received, Fink’s vision of stakeholde­r capitalism focuses far too narrowly on intraorgan­izational corporate governance. In failing to address the wider landscape of extra-organizati­onal, institutio­nal relations between different domains and sectors of society, Fink maintains the traditiona­lly stark distinctio­n between stakeholde­rs and shareholde­rs.

Consider the results: BlackRock is the fifth-largest shareholde­r in Fox News at a time when that network’s onair personalit­ies are openly striving to undermine American democracy and the rule of law, seemingly forgetting that US capitalism is premised on both. Which shareholde­rs have a stake in that?

Mariana Mazzucato, Professor in the Economics of Innovation and Public Value at University College London, is Founding Director of the UCL Institute for Innovation & Public Purpose.

© Project Syndicate, 2022.

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