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Introducing equanomics |
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By Khaled Diab Governments need to rethink their economy policies to make them more
equitable and responsive to citizens’ needs. |
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January
2009
Reading
the business pages is like wading through a nuclear wasteland littered with
‘toxic assets’. Gordon Brown is now working to limit the damage from this
radioactive debt with a multi-billion pound safety
net for the financial system. This, along with the hundreds of billions
the government has already pledged, not to mention the tens of billion it has
already spent, has sparked warnings of possible
bankruptcy for the Since it
rippled out from the subprime scandal in the Rather
than face paying the price for the ruin they have visited on others, top
executives have been giving each other golden handshakes before donning their
diamond-encrusted parachutes and leaping out of the blazing wrecks they have
left for governments to keep airborne with both engines burning. But even
in the The
brewing outrage is hardly surprising when you consider that, as millions face
the prospect of the dole and losing their homes, top
managers are sitting pretty and laughing. Take the Merril
Lynch executive who got $25
million for three months work or, on this side of the Atlantic, the €4
million payoff received by the former chief financial officer of
Belgian-Dutch Fortis Bank, which benefited from a
government bailout to the tune of €11.2 billion. Even
George W Bush, a leading cheerleader of neo-liberal economics who has
probably done more than any other president to fatten the bottom line of
corporate What
needs to be done is not only to limit executive pay in banks receiving
government bailouts but across the board. We need a general cap on earnings,
which would be high enough to provide an incentive for people to perform and
strive but low enough to prevent major economic injustice. But that,
in itself, is not enough. We need to rethink our approach to the economy and
herald in a new age of what I call equanomics,
where the success of an economy is judged by how well it improves citizens’
well-being, narrows the gap between them, and truly provides them with equal
opportunities. At
present, there is too much of a tendency to regard the economy as somehow
existing outside of society. But this false separation has led policy-makers
in many countries to put the interests of the market ahead of the interests
of the people. Equanomics would remove the false
barriers between the economy, markets and society, and social indicators –
such as quality of life, education and health – would count as much as macro-
and microeconomic indicators. In
addition to maximum and minimum limits on income, under equanomics,
salaries would be determined not only according to a job’s market value but
also its social worth through, say, an impartial index which draws on the
views of experts and the general public to assess the social value of
different jobs. Of course, this might mean that top executives will be taxed
extra to raise the pay of nurses. Some will
argue that only free markets can create the wealth needed to improve people’s
lives and that communism only succeeded in impoverishing societies in its
quest for equality. I am not advocating the imposition of a communist
dystopia, but the sort of enlightened blend of socialism and capitalism that
served Europe well in the post-war years and has helped Besides,
free market capitalism has failed dismally to create the utopia it promised.
Despite the laudable talk of equal opportunities, economic disparity robs
millions of the opportunity to shine and succeed. For example, an upper-class boy in the The free
market, as we currently know it, is actually not an ‘invisible hand’ that
dispenses impartial economic justice. The big players, from oligarchs to
dominant or pseudo-monopolistic corporations, have a massive distortionary effect on the efficient functioning of the
market. This is
reflected in the rapidly rising levels of global income and wealth
inequality, which has led the UN to sound the alarm on the possibility of
widespread social unrest, not only in developing
countries, but also in the In the
UK, since income disparity rose at unprecedented rates in the 1980s, those Thatcherite levels of economic inequality have been
perpetuated, with the super rich racing even further ahead, the middle
classes getting a modest piece of the action, and the lowest income groups
being left behind to eat everyone else’s dust. Of
course, given the fact that multinationals are of a size to rival small,
prosperous nation states and the financial markets can punish governments for
stepping out of line, the need for coordinated intergovernmental action has
become all the more urgent. In this regard, governments can harness the power
of the EU and other regional blocs, and even reinvent the World Trade
Organisation, to make globalisation fairer and more equitable. The
current crisis risks deepening the wealth gap, as millions in the middle and
lower income brackets face the prospect of imminent unemployment and pay
cuts, while government funds are exhausted underwriting the welfare of the
wealthy. We need governments to put equanomic
principles at the heart of their policy if we are to avoid widespread social
conflict and enhance socio-economic justice. This
column appeared in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section
on 19 January 2009. Read the related
discussion. ãCopyright 2009 – Khaled Diab.
Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the copyright of Khaled Diab. |