"Davos cross-post: Tony Blair & Co. are still bullish on capitalism
Tony Blair says he recently ran into an old friend from his leftie university days."Ah, I told you," his friend said. "I told you capitalism is going to end."
Blair doesn't buy it. "The free enterprise system as a whole has not failed," he says. "The financial system has failed. ... We've been taught a very old lesson, which is that values matter."
He's saying all this up on stage in a session on "The Values Behind Market Capitalism" this morning. (I'm sitting near the back of the room, and the wifi connection is excellent.) But this is also sort of the big theme of the World Economic Forum this year: Something's broken with financial-market capitalism. Hardly any of the people who show up at an event like this want to replace it with some other kind of -ism. So they talk a lot about the need to temper the profit motive with values.
"One lesson we should not learn from the current financial crisis is that we should turn the clock back on global financial markets," says HSBC Group Chairman Stephen Green, who is next up after Blair. But neither can we go back to the credo of recent years: "If there's a market for it and it's legal I don't need to think about anything else."
And now it's more of the same from Pepsi's Indra Nooyi, with some added digs toward Wall Street: "As CEO of a Main Street company I think we have been tainted by the issues that have come up on the other street. ... 100% of Main Street has got great values and is doing fine. The other part of the economy has problems." She also thinks regulators need to be paid more.
Meanwhile, Shimon Peres likes "the Google" and thinks it's great that Sergey and Larry have gotten rich off it. But he thinks social democracy is great too.
So there you have it. The Third Way is upon us. More later, but I'm starting to feel like I'm being kind of rude by blogging while these people speak. It shows a lack of values, perhaps."
Moi:
Thursday, January 29, 2009 at 11:09 am
In my opinion, we've been living in the third way for a while. Since it has basically suited us, and will take severe economic and social disruptions to change, probably not for the better, I suggest we keep it.
I seem to agree with the ethics argument in the following sense: I feel that Fraud, Negligence, Fiduciary Mismanagement, and Collusion were rampant. We need a serious investigation and prosecution where crimes are discovered, and civil suits need to be pursued as well. Some of the advice, while not criminal, was not up to code, so to speak.
I feel that this goes back to the S & L Crisis. I felt that many investors got away with fraud, etc., in that crisis. One of the excuses for not prosecuting people was that sheer stupidity often looks like fraud. I didn't buy it then, and I don't buy it now.
In any case, I don't get the feeling that many people agree with me, so I expect another one of these pushing the legal envelope catastrophes in the near future.
On the other hand, who can argue with better ethical behavior? Maybe people who argue that it's not economically efficient in distributing funds to them.