Eastern Eye (UK)

Yunus offers post-pandemic vision

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NOBEL prize winner Muhammad Yunus has called for “outrageous­ly bold” thinking to reshape postCovid society, including the creation of a new type of bank to help millions of workers whose livelihood­s have been hit by the pandemic.

The Bangladesh­i economist, nicknamed “banker to the poor”, said the crisis presented an opportunit­y to carve out a fairer, greener future for the world, which was currently “a ticking time bomb”.

He highlighte­d three priorities – halting climate change, tackling wealth inequality, and preventing mass unemployme­nt as artificial intelligen­ce threatens to wipe out jobs.

Yunus told the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s annual event, Trust Conference, that Covid-19 had shown up the weaknesses in the global economy and society. But he added: “When you hit the darkest part you come up with the brightest ideas.

“Why don’t we throw away the old thinking? We have to be outrageous­ly bold ... to adopt things never adopted before.”

Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 with Grameen Bank, a micro-finance organisati­on he founded in 1983 to provide loans to poor people who cannot access mainstream banks. It is an initiative that has since inspired similar programmes worldwide.

The 80-year-old economist told the online conference that a postCovid future should be built on social businesses – enterprise­s dedicated to tackling social and environmen­tal problems through commercial means. Collective interest, not maximising profits, should be the driving force for business, he said.

Yunus said the pandemic has had a particular­ly devastatin­g impact on people in the informal sector who make up 70 per cent of workers in countries like Bangladesh and often have no savings.

He said informal sector workers should be recognised as entreprene­urs and called for the creation of “social business micro-entreprene­urial banks” to help them get back on their feet.

Social businesses could also be a solution for flawed healthcare systems whose failures had been exposed by the pandemic, he added.

Yunus said it was also time to rethink the world’s “urban-centric” economy which forces people to seek work hundreds of miles from their homes.

In an age of modern technology, he questioned why many businesses, including call centres, could not be built in village areas.

The economist said he did not understand everyone’s eagerness to rush back to a pre-Covid era. A world where about one per cent of the population owns 99 per cent of the wealth is a ticking time bomb and will “explode in anger, dissatisfa­ction and political upheaval”, he said.

“Why do you want to go back to that world? It was a terrible world,” he added, alluding to climate change as well as the growing wealth gap. “That world was like we (were) riding a big train, rushing to our death ... We want to go back to ride that train again?”

Yunus called instead for a “world of three zeros” – zero net carbon emissions, zero wealth concentrat­ion, and zero unemployme­nt. “This is the time to do it,” he said. (Thomson Reu

ters Foundation)

 ?? © Slaven Vlasic/ Getty Images ?? BOLD THOUGHT: Muhammad Yunus
© Slaven Vlasic/ Getty Images BOLD THOUGHT: Muhammad Yunus

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