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The Rights of Living Persons


excerpted from the book


The Post-Corporate World


Life After Capitalism


by David Korten


Kumarian Press, 1999, paper






p183
Thurman Arnold
The idea that a corporation is endowed with the rights and prerogatives of a
free individual is as essential to the acceptance of corporate rule in
temporal affairs as was the ideal of the divine right of kings in an earlier
day.


Human rights secure our freedom to live fully and responsibly within life's
community. We are finding, however, that as corporations have become
increasingly successful in claiming these same rights for themselves, they
have become increasingly assertive in denying them to living people. For
example ... they use property rights as an instrument to deny the
economically weak the most fundamental of all human rights-the right to
live-by denying them the right of access to a means of living. The conflict
between the person's right to a means of living and the presumed right of the
corporation to the security of its property and profit is perhaps the
ultimate confrontation between the natural rights of living people and the
rights that the institutions of capitalism have presumed for themselves, but
it is only one of many.


Supported by legions of corporate lawyers and sympathetic judges,
corporations have worked through the courts to acquire ever more of the
rights and freedoms that living persons gained only through long and
difficult political struggle. They have in turn used the rights so acquired
to extend their control over the institutions of democracy and the material,
communications, and knowledge resources on which people depend to secure
their living. Now, in a further move to consolidate their power, the
institutions of money are well on their way to declaring themselves owners of
the whole of life through the systematic effort to expand the private
patenting of genetic materials.


There seems to be an ironclad relationship. The stronger the rights of
corporations, the weaker the rights of persons to live fully and well with
freedom, responsibility, and dignity. Thus, to restore human rights and
dignity we must establish clearly the principle that human rights reside
solely in living persons.





>From Property Rights to the Rights of Property


In the American colonies the vote was reserved for the owners of real
property-a mechanism widely favored by the landed aristocracy in the early
days of democracy to confine political control to the presumably more
diligent landed classes. In effect, that law connected political rights to
property rather than to the person, an idea that to this day carries the seed
of democracy's undoing. When a person's rights are recognized only in
proportion to his or her property, it is as though rights reside in the
property rather than in the person.


We have since vested the vote in personhood rather than propertyhood and
assumed that all is right with democracy. Meantime, in other spheres of
political and economic life, the rights of property and the propertied have
steadily expanded at the expense of the rights of the person. Of special
significance was a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to name the
corporation, which is created by government and claimed by its shareholders
as property, an honorary person entitled to the rights thereof.


In the United States the natural rights of persons are enshrined in the first
ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, known as the Bill of Rights. Indeed,
the individual states approved the Constitution only once assurances were
given that a Bill of Rights would be added through amendment. Each provision
was thoroughly contested, publicly debated, and subject to ratification by
all of the state legislatures. Since the time of ratification all other U.S.
laws have been subject to the test of consistency with these constitutionally
guaranteed human rights. The U.S. Constitution, however, does not use the
term "human" rights. It speaks rather of the rights of persons, which most
people would take to be the same thing.


In 1886, however, in the case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that a private corporation is a
person and entitled to the legal rights and protections the Constitution
affords to any person. Because the Constitution makes no mention of
corporations, it is a fairly clear case of the Court's taking it upon itself
to rewrite the Constitution.


Far more remarkable, however, is that the doctrine of corporate personhood,
which subsequently became a cornerstone of corporate law, was introduced in
this 1886 decision without argument. According to the official case record,
Supreme Court Justice Morrison Remick Waite simply pronounced before the
beginning of argument in the case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad that


The court does not wish to hear argument on the question of whether the
provision in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which forbids a
State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of
the laws, applies to these corporations. We are all of opinion that it does.


The court reporter duly entered into the summary record of the Court's
findings that:


The defendant Corporations are persons within the intent of the clause in
section 1 of the Fourteen [sic] Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, which forbids a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws.


Thus it was that a two-sentence assertion by a single judge elevated
corporations to the status of persons under the law, prepared the way for the
rise of global corporate rule, and thereby changed the course of history.


The doctrine of corporate personhood creates an interesting legal
contradiction. The corporation is owned by its shareholders and is therefore
their property. If it is also a legal person, then it is a person owned by
others and thus exists in a condition of slavery-a status explicitly
forbidden by the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution. So is a
corporation a person illegally held in servitude by its shareholders? Or is
it a person who enjoys rights of personhood that take precedence over the
presumed ownership rights of its shareholders? So far as I have been able to
determine, this contradiction has not been directly addressed by the courts.


Without addressing this question directly, the courts have moved
persistently, however, in the direction of expanding corporate rights and
increasing the autonomy of corporate management, even from intervention by
the corporation's titular owners. Corporations now enjoy unlimited life;
virtual freedom of movement anywhere on the globe; control of the mass media;
the ability to amass legions of lawyers and public relations specialists in
support of their cause; and freedom from liability for the misdeeds of wholly
owned subsidiaries. They also enjoy the presumed right to amass property and
financial resources without limit; engage in any legal activity; bring
liability suits against private citizens or civic organizations that
challenge them; make contributions to individual candidates, political
parties, and political action committees and deduct those contributions from
taxable income as business expenses; withhold potentially damaging
information from customers; and avoid restrictions on the advertising of
harmful but legal products in the name of commercial free speech. Although
their owners hold the ultimate decision-making power and the corporation is
obliged to manage its affairs for the sole benefit of its owners, these
owners bear no accountability for corporate misdeeds or liability beyond the
loss of value of their shares. Step-by-step, largely through judge-made law,
corporations have become far more powerful than ever intended by the people
and governments that created them.


To Restore the Rights of the Living


Those concerned with curbing the excesses of the corporation have generally
focused on one of two losing strategies. The first is to appeal to the
conscience of the corporation to act more responsibly. As Robert Monks
reminds us, however, in The Emperor's Nightingale, Corporations are not
people; they have no conscience. Although corporate acts are carried out by
individuals, even individuals with high moral standards often find themselves
caught up in a corporate action that is beyond their control-or even, in some
cases, their knowledge.


The corporation is a legal instrument and the people of conscience who work
for it are legally obligated to set aside their own values in favor of the
financial interests of the institution and its shareholders.


A further barrier to corporate responsibility resides in the extent to which
the existence and profitability of many corporations depend on successfully
promoting harmful products and encouraging behaviors damaging to one's self
and society. Could the R. J. Reynolds corporation, for example, really commit
itself to discouraging anyone under twenty-one years of age from smoking,
knowing this would virtually eliminate its future market for tobacco
products? Could the Coca-Cola corporation decide to stop encouraging children
to consume large amounts of flavored sugar water and encourage them to
substitute clean tap water and fresh fruit juices? Could the General Motors
corporation become a serious advocate of urban growth boundaries and improved
public transportation to limit dependence on the automobile?


When the Monsanto corporation announced it was divesting itself of most of
its industrial chemicals production to concentrate on genetic engineering,
its stock price doubled in anticipation of major increases in earnings. Can
the management of the Monsanto corporation now afford to hold a new
genetically engineered product off the market until it is certain there is no
serious possibility of harmful environmental or health consequences? In each
instance, making the socially responsible choice would be equivalent to
corporate suicide and surely cost the CEO his job.


The second losing strategy is to oppose corporate misdeeds corporation by
corporation and deed by deed. The victories are costly, few, and generally
only temporary because they do nothing to change the nature of the
corporation or reduce its staying power. A major case in point is the
legendary citizen boycott of the Nestle corporation demanding that it stop
encouraging poor mothers in Third World countries to favor bottle feeding
over breast feeding-a practice responsible for untold numbers of infant dea
ths. To end the boycott, Nestle agreed to change its practices. Meanwhile,
other infant formula producers continued similar promotions, and Nestle
itself was soon back to doing the same. On the other hand, the losses are
often permanent, as when children die, or when citizens lose the battle to
keep a Wal-Mart out of their town or to stop the clear-cut of an ancient
forest by a timber corporation.


Any initiative that raises public consciousness of corporate misdeeds makes a
useful contribution and we must surely oppose corporate abuses with all the
means at our disposal. However, although we may win some battles, we will
continue to lose the war so long as capitalism's dysfunctional structures
remain in place. To restore the rights and powers of the living we must
eliminate the autonomous rights and powers of money and its institutions
through a six-fold agenda aimed at restoring political democracy; ending the
legal fiction of corporate personhood; establishing an international
agreement regulating international corporations and finance; eliminating
corporate welfare; restoring money's role as a medium of exchange; and
advancing economic democracy.


Each of these six agenda items defines an important goal for citizen action.
Although the agenda has universal relevance and is already being advanced by
citizen initiatives in a number of countries, most of the examples I will use
center on the United States. Our government and our corporations have been
the major architects of the global capitalist system and hold the major
levers of power. We therefore bear greater responsibility than any other
country for the global crisis and for taking steps to dismantle the system
that has created it.


Each agenda item defines an important initiative in its own right requiring
the development of specific legislative proposals, programs of direct action,
and political mobilization strategies. The purpose here is only to identify
the critical focal points for citizen action aimed at transforming the
existing system of economic power.


AGENDA ITEM 1: RESTORE POLITICAL DEMOCRACY


To raise the money required to wage successful campaigns, politicians must
spend a large portion of their time courting favor with and tending to the
interests of the biggest corporations and wealthiest investors. It has become
a vicious cycle. The more the politicians bend the rules to channel an ever
greater share of society's real wealth to the already rich, the more money
the rich can channel to politicians to gain further advantage.


There are few issues in America on which public consensus is so clear and
unanimous. Eighty-six percent of Americans believe campaign contributions
influence the policies supported by public officials moderately or a great
deal. Seventy-nine percent favor "putting a limit on the amount of money
candidates for the U.S. House and Senate can raise and spend on their
political campaigns." Eighty-one percent favor "limiting the total amount of
money which business and industry can contribute to U.S. House and Senate
campaigns each election." Sixty-four percent believe it would be a good idea
for the federal government to provide a fixed amount of money for the
election campaigns of candidates for Congress and prohibit all private
contributions. And 48 percent think they are more likely to see Elvis Presley
in person than to see the U.S. Congress pass real campaign finance reform.


Increasingly of the opinion that political bodies have become too corrupt to
reform themselves, citizens in the United States are turning to state ballot
measures. In November 1996, voters in the state of Maine passed a clean-money
campaign-reform initiative by a 56 to 44 percent vote after the state
legislature had rejected more than forty reform proposals during the previous
decade. Eleven-hundred grassroots volunteers collected more than sixty-five
thousand signatures on Election Day 1995 to place the measure on the ballot.
The initiative, passed in 1996, did what no state or federal legislative body
had ever done-offered full public financing to candidates for state office
who reject special-interest contributions and agree to campaign-spending
limits. Spurred to action by the Maine initiative, Vermont's state
legislature passed a similar measure by a wide majority. By mid-1998, diverse
grassroots coalitions and reform-minded legislators were pursuing similar
measures in fourteen other states. Although state-level measures change the
election rules only for state-level offices, the spreading and strengthening
of these efforts sends a powerful signal to national-level politicians that
the voters care.


No issue is more central to restoring the rights of living people than
serious campaign finance reform. If a democracy of people based on one
person, one vote is to be restored, then we must have strict limits on
political giving and spending and get corporations out of the political
process.


Meaningful reform will necessarily include a combination of public financing
of political campaigns and provision of free television and radio time to
qualified candidates as a public service obligation of those licensed to use
the public airwaves, and a prohibition on any effort by a corporation to
influence the outcome of an election, legislation, or referendum, or the
negotiation of an international agreement or treaty.


The matter of excluding corporations from political participation merits
elaboration. The authority by which a government issues a corporate charter
is derived from the sovereign authority of its people. It is appropriate that
those who have created the corporation determine the rules under which it
will exist and function and that the corporation accept those rules or
relinquish its charter and operate as an unincorporated entity. Barring the
corporation from politics affirms the principle that political rights and
freedoms reside in the person, not in properties or artificial legal entities.


AGENDA ITEM 2: END THE LEGAL FICTION OF CORPORATE PERSONHOOD


The legal fiction that the corporation is a natural person is a major lever
by which corporations have acquired the rights they now use to deny the right
of living people to a means of living. Similarly, this legal fiction is used
by corporations to claim free speech rights for themselves in promoting their
products without public oversight and in seeking to influence public policy,
while they use a combination of speech and property rights to prohibit the
exercise of the right to free speech by real people. Thus union members are
barred from engaging in organizing activities on company property. Citizen
activists are barred from exercising their speech rights in shopping malls.
The corporations that control the mass media reserve the right to decide
whose voices will and will not be heard on the public airwaves.


Step-by-step, a small number of corporations are privatizing ever more of our
public spaces and reserving them solely for the exercise of their own speech
rights to the exclusion of the speech rights of real persons. In these and
other ways the doctrine of corporate personhood actively endangers the rights
of people and presents a barrier to citizen efforts to hold corporations
accountable to a larger public interest.


The time has come to launch a serious challenge against the legal fiction of
corporate personhood on the principle that the natural rights of persons
belong only to living persons. Although the longer-term goal is to eliminate
the for-profit, publicly traded corporation as we know it, the interim
objective is to restore the doctrine that a corporation enjoys only those
privileges specified in its charter to facilitate the conduct of a business
in the public interest and that these privileges are subject to periodic
public review and withdrawal. Furthermore, the privileges extended are
exclusive to the jurisdiction of the governmental entity that issued the
charter and do not extend to any other jurisdiction except by the explicit
action of the appropriate governmental authorities in that jurisdiction. This
doctrine would place strict limits on corporate privileges, without in any
way restraining or limiting the recognition and exercise of the universal
rights of living persons.


There are few actions we might contemplate with comparably far-reaching
positive consequences than the elimination of corporate personhood. Progress
on this issue in any country would be a positive step, but it is especially
important that we engage the cause in the United States, for it is here that
the doctrine originated.


AGENDA ITEM 3: ESTABLISH AN INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENT REGULATING INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATIONS AND FINANCE


International trade and investment agreements such as GATT, NAFTA, APEC, and
the others have become the favored venues for further extending corporate
rights at the expense of democracy and the right of people to govern their
own economic affairs. Created largely outside any democratic process, these
agreements override democratically enacted laws protecting human and
environmental interests. So deeply have our governments aligned with the
interests of global capitalism that, following the Uruguay Round of the GATT
negotiations that established the World Trade Organization, there was a
flurry of initiatives led by the United States to put in place agreements on
international investment and finance, including a Multilateral Agreement on
Investment (MAI) that would preclude virtually any governmental regulation of
the free international flow of speculative money and require governments to
guarantee foreign investors against any losses they might incur from the
subsequent introduction of environmental or health and safety regulations.


A number of trade disputes between the United States and Europe brought to or
resolved by the World Trade Organization (WTO) show how these agreements and
institutions are used to thwart the ability of democratic governments to
respond to the wishes of their citizens for responsible laws on social goals,
food security, and food safety. Consider two cases in which the WTO ruled in
favor of the United States and against the European Union. One was a U.S.
complaint against Europeans for giving preference to bananas produced in the
Caribbean over those grown in Latin America. The bananas from the Caribbean
were being produced largely on small family farms and were one of the only
foreign exchange earners of several small Caribbean island economies. The
bananas from Latin America were being grown by U.S. agribusiness
corporations-Chiquita, Dole, and Del Monte, which together control almost
two-thirds of the world's banana market-on large plantations that have
displaced hundreds of small farmers from their lands. The United States thus
used the WTO to force Europe to end its preference for the small producers
and open its markets to unrestricted access by global megacorporations.
Government and company representatives maintain that political donations of
$1.1 million to the Democratic Party and $1.4 million to the Republican Party
by the Chiquita corporation and its chairman had no influence on the U.S.
government's interest in the case.


The second case involved a U.S. complaint against a European ban on the
import of beef from cows treated with hormones. As the use of hormone
supplements is routine in U.S. beef production, the United States complained
that the ban discriminated against U.S. producers. The WTO agreed with the
United States, ignoring the widespread concern in Europe that the hormones
may involve health risks and a strong consumer preference to avoid eating
meat from hormone-treated cows. " The U.S. corporations involved in the
production and use of the hormones argue that such concerns are groundless
and unsupported by scientific data and therefore should be disregarded-claims
similar to those long made by cigarette companies regarding concerns about
the dangers of tobacco smoke.


On a third issue, Europe yielded voluntarily to U.S. pressure to relax
restrictions on the import of furs from the United States obtained by use of
leg-hold traps, restrictions many feel were fully justified on humanitarian
grounds. Unresolved was a U.S. threat to bring a WTO action against France
for blocking imports of genetically engineered corn on the grounds that it
was simply a measure to protect French corn farmers. Here again many European
consumers are concerned about the implications of genetically altered food in
relation to health, ethics, and the environment, but such concerns are likely
to carry little weight with the WTO unless backed by conclusive scientific
findings. Even if there were no health issue, from a human interest
perspective there is a strong case to be made that national governments have
an obligation to both their own and the world's people to maintain food
production capacity and national food security in a world likely to be
threatened by severe food shortages in the near future. But there is no
sympathy for such concerns in the WTO if they lead to the restriction of
trade.


Managed borders are essential to the very existence of life - a principle
that applies to economies as well as to cells and organisms. To create
mindful markets people must be able to protect the coherence and integrity of
their domestic and local economies, which is virtually impossible if their
borders are wide open to foreign corporations and financial institutions they
are forbidden to control. If we are to take economic democracy seriously,
decisions regarding economic policies and choices must be firmly in the hands
of a country's citizens.


Citizen groups have become increasingly active in opposing trade agreements
that undermine the democratic rights of people. It is important that these
resistance efforts continue. We must block further efforts to use trade
agreements to circumvent democracy. The time has come, however, for a
citizen-led initiative to demand that our governments put in place an
entirely different kind of international agreement aimed at holding global
corporations and finance accountable to the human interest.


This may logically begin with an international alliance of citizen groups
joining to draft a prototype international agreement affirming the rights of
people to set their own health, safety, employment, and environmental
standards and to establish standards and mechanisms for regulating
international corporations and financial flows. The document should establish
mechanisms to discourage financial speculation, break up international
concentrations of corporate power, and phase out the World Trade
Organization, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and other
international agencies whose primary mission is to advance the interests of
transnational capital. It should also recognize and secure the right of each
individual country to set its own economic priorities and standards and
determine the terms under which it will trade with others and invite others
to invest in its economy. The process of drafting such an agreement should be
designed to engage the broadest citizen participation and build a significant
citizen political constituency demanding that our governments sign and enact
the agreement as a replacement for existing corporate-sponsored trade and
investment agreements.


AGENDA ITEM 4: ELIMINATE CORPORATE WELFARE


Corporate welfare is not limited to direct public subsidies and tax breaks.
It includes a much wider range of externalized costs relating to such things
as substandard wages and working conditions, worker health and safety,
environmental damage, and dangerous and defective products. Chapter 2 noted
the estimate by Ralph Estes that in the United States alone corporations
annually externalize more than $2.6 trillion in costs per year, roughly five
times the amount of corporate profits. The global figure may be on the order
of $10.7 trillion. There is a strong case to be made that corporations
provide handsome returns to their top managers and shareholders only at an
extraordinary cost to the rest of society. Many would surely go out of
business if required to pay their own way as market principles dictate.


An obvious starting point toward the elimination of corporate welfare is to
eliminate direct public subsidies and tax breaks for corporations, because
these are direct financial transfers from taxpayers to corporate managers and
shareholders. The next step is to charge environmental use fees for the full
public costs of natural-resource extraction and the release of pollutants
into the environment. Such action would align with current tax-shift
proposals that call for reducing or eliminating taxes on employment, basic
incomes, and essential consumption and making up the lost income through fees
for resource extraction and pollution. Such a shift from employment and
consumption taxes to environmental fees would encourage employment, eliminate
the most regressive sales taxes, reduce pollution and resource extraction,
and encourage recycling-all highly beneficial outcomes. If the environmental
fees reflect actual costs to society, it would also be a significant step
toward eliminating market-distorting public subsidies.


A third step would be to establish procedures for estimating the amount of
other indirect subsidies enjoyed by individual corporations and assessing a
public facilities fee in that amount. The fee would recover idle costs to
society of corporations that fail to provide a living wage adequate to
support a family, health insurance, pension contributions, and safe working
conditions for their workers on the grounds that these costs are thus borne
by the larger society. Similarly, it would recover the public costs of
harmful and defective products such as cigarettes and unsafe automobiles. For
example, cost-recovery fees would be assessed on the basis of actuarial
experience with the health costs of smoking-related diseases in the case of
cigarettes and accident rates and consequences in the case of automobiles.


Ideally, all countries would choose to move toward the elimination of
corporate subsidies in unison. Given, however, that there is almost no
prospect of this happening, it is important to establish the principle that
each nation has the right to protect its own producers from predatory
competition from subsidized producers by imposing compensating tariffs.


AGENDA ITEM 5: RESTORE MONEY'S ROLE AS A MEDIUM OF EXCHANGE


Money serves a useful social function as a medium of exchange. In the hands
of speculators, however, it becomes an anti-democratic, anti-market
instrument of instability and unjust extraction. A central goal of economic
policy should be to eliminate financial speculation and restore money's
primary role as a medium of exchange.


Nearly $2 trillion now changes hands in the world's currency exchange markets
each day. Perhaps 2 percent of that money is related to trade in real goods
and services. The rest, which is largely pursuing speculative profits,
creates massive international financial instability while serving little if
any public purpose. The following are reforms that merit consideration.


Prohibit banks from financing speculators.


... the financial speculation that destabilized the Asian economies in 1997
was fueled by reckless bank lending that financed the creation of large stock
and real estate bubbles. The 1998 collapse in the United States of a single
highly leveraged hedge fund, Long-Term Capital Management, that made bad bets
on the Russian ruble posed such a threat to the U.S. banking system that the
Federal Reserve stepped in to arrange a private bailout. LongTerm Capital's
gambling habit was financed with $25 in bank loans for every dollar of
equity. There are an estimated 4,000 hedge funds in the world. Some have as
much as $100 in loan financing for every dollar in equity. Bear in mind these
bank loans represent money that banks created out of nothing and you begin to
see how the enormous speculative overhang in the global money system is being
created. This lending is a key source of speculative bubbles and the related
financial instability that has been rocking the world.


Gambling with borrowed money is a bad idea under any circumstances. When it
is done on a scale that threatens the integrity of national financial
systems, there is a compelling rationale for strong public measures to
eliminate it. Appropriate measures include prohibiting banks from accepting
financial assets as loan collateral and from lending to hedge funds and other
financial institutions for the purpose of leveraging the purchase or sale of
financial securities or derivatives. Buying stocks on margin should be
similarly prohibited.


Tax short-term capital gains at rates substantially higher than earned
income.


Giving a tax advantage to those who live from speculative gains over those
who do productive work for a living is unjust and bad policy. It is
appropriate to tax away virtually all gains from capital assets held less
than a month as they are almost certainly speculative in nature. It is
appropriate that gains from assets held for longer periods of time enjoy more
favorable treatment, but in general gains from an asset held less than five
years should not enjoy a tax advantage over earned income. This should be
true for corporations as well as for individuals.


Encourage the use of local currencies.


Money's value is based solely on a social contract-an agreement among a group
of people that they will accept a particular tender in the payment of debts.
A common currency not only facilitates exchange but also defines a community
with a mutual interest in productive exchange among its members. The
community thereby affirms its own existence and creates a natural preference
for its own products. Bernard Lietaer estimates that fifteen hundred
communities around the world have issued their own local currencies to
facilitate local commerce. The idea is not to eliminate national currencies
but rather to supplement them with local currencies that necessarily stay in
the community that issues them so that local workers and assets need never
stand idle for a simple lack of the money to facilitate exchange.


Make the creation of national currencies a public function.


A nation's money supply is created by either government's spending new money
into existence or a bank's loaning it into existence. The former approach
allows a government to pay for public services beyond the amount of its tax
revenues. The latter generates large profits for private bankers. Though it's
not generally recognized by the public, virtually all money is now loaned
into existence by private banks, which means a nation's money supply and the
stability of its money system depend on continuously expanding debt to create
enough money to repay the old debts and avoid bankruptcy-a primary reason why
capitalist economies are prone to collapse if they do not grow exponentially.
Placing a 100 percent reserve requirement on demand deposits in the banking
system and returning the function of creating national currencies to
government would largely eliminate the federal government's need to borrow,
reduce the power of the banking system, and eliminate an important source of
the money world's growth imperative.


Place a demurrage charge on money.


Holding virtually any real asset involves a cost to the holder. Forests,
factories, farmland, and buildings must be protected and maintained. Personal
skills and technologies must be updated. Even holding gold involves costs for
secure storage. Only those who hold money as a future claim against the
wealth that others are creating and maintaining expect a secure, cost-free
interest return with no effort on their part. This feature of money
encourages the conversion of real wealth to money to be held in inflating
financial assets, though the interests of society are best served by
encouraging the creation, stewardship, and augmentation of real wealth. Money
expert Bernard Lietaer suggests that the resulting distortions be corrected
by charging a small demurrage fee for holding financial assets-say a quarter
of a percent a month or 3 percent a year. This might, for example, make it
more profitable to invest in growing trees than to hold money in a bank
account. Banks would continue to pay interest on savings accounts and charge
interest on loans as they do now. The government, however, would levy the
demurrage fee against any outstanding financial balances.


Restore the concept of community banking.


At one time the United States had what is known as a unitary banking system,
which means that each bank was individually owned and functioned as a
community institution. Local savings were deposited and the money was loaned
back to the community for local housing and business investment. It is
appropriate to restore this concept by using antitrust rules to break up
banking conglomerates and limiting federal deposit insurance to funds
deposited with community banks that lend locally.


Restrict the conversion of national and local currencies for purposes other
than tourism and trade in real goods and services.


Beneficial foreign investment necessarily involves the importation of real
capital goods, skills, and technologies that increase a country's future
productive potential. Purely speculative foreign investment involves no such
transfer. It simply creates financial instability, transfers ownership of
productive assets to absentee owners, and increases foreign claims against
the country's future foreign exchange earnings. As speculative investment
flows create public hardship without increasing public welfare, governments
have both the right and the obligations to regulate, and even to prohibit,
them in the public interest.


AGENDA ITEM 6. ADVANCE ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY


The previous elements of the agenda focus on constraining the power of global
corporations and finance in order to open economic spaces within which people
can create the institutions of economic democracy and a true market economy.
In addition to such defensive measures, there is room for public policy to be
proactive in promoting human-scale, stakeholder-owned enterprises to displace
the subsidized megacorporations whose hold the earlier measures are intended
to weaken.


Many such enterprises already exist in the form of family businesses,
cooperatives, community-owned businesses, worker-owned enterprises, and
others. New ones are being formed each day. Here the need is to acknowledge
the central role of these enterprises as the foundation of the new economy
and expand the spaces in which they can flourish as the corporate
superstructure is cleared away.


We can also salvage much from existing corporate structures by breaking down
megacorporations into human-scale, stakeholder-owned firms. The measures
already suggested, such as getting corporations out of politics, restoring
the integrity of national economic borders, and eliminating corporate
welfare, will likely make most megacorporations unprofitable and thereby
increase the receptivity of their managers and shareholders to selling off
their component businesses to stakeholders at appropriately depreciated
prices.


Measures to support stakeholder ownership might include requiring that before
a major corporation is allowed to close a plant or undertake a sale or merger
of significant assets, the affected workers and community must be given first
option to buy out the assets on preferential terms. There might be
preferential tax treatment for shareholders who sell their shares to
stakeholders under an organized stakeholder buyout program. Similarly, relief
on estate taxes might be used to encourage the conversion of larger
family-owned corporations to stakeholder ownership on the death of their
founders. Procedures could be established for converting worker pension funds
into meaningful worker ownership programs. Banks might be given incentives to
provide loans on preferential terms to finance stakeholder buyouts. Financing
might also be mobilized by what Jeff Gates calls a user fee on personal
financial accumulations in excess of $10 million "for the privilege of
utilizing the nation's private property tradition as a vehicle for
accumulating assets totally disproportionate to any conceivable notion of
need." This would be a wealth redistribution initiative addressed directly to
the need to redistribute asset ownership.


Efforts to move toward stakeholder ownership must take into account the histo
ry of worker ownership schemes that have not led to meaningful worker
participation and empowerment. As noted in Chapter 9, many employee stock
ownership plans (ESOPs) in the United States place the control of employee
shares in the hands of management. The result is a perversion of the concept
of stakeholder ownership that gives the titular stakeholder owner less power
and say in management than an ordinary absentee owner. Our goal should be
exactly the opposite-a much larger and more meaningful role in management by
stakeholder owners than by absentee owners.


There is need to reform the legal framework and mechanisms of ESOPs to enable
and encourage ESOP owners to engage in real ownership participation.
Consideration might also be given to expanding existing employee ownership
plans to facilitate broader participation by other nonfinancial stakeholders.
Significant investment will be needed in educational programs designed to
prepare workers and other stakeholders for meaningful and responsible
participation. An imaginative and reinvigorated labor union movement could
take the lead in advancing stakeholder ownership and providing educational
support as part of an agenda to secure the rights of working people and
create people-friendly working environments.


It will be appropriate to supplement these initiatives in support of
stakeholder ownership with the rigorous application of antitrust legislation
revamped to establish the presumption that smaller is better until proven
otherwise. Thus, mergers and acquisitions would be approved only in those
rare instances in which their proponents make a compelling case that the
combination would significantly advance the public interest. Any firm with
more than a 10 percent share in a major market might be required every five
years to make a compelling case in a public regulatory hearing as to why it
would not be in the public interest to break it up into more human-scale
stakeholder-owned firms.


The proposed six-fold agenda attacks the foundation of unaccountable fi
nancial and corporate power and opens the way to a radical redistribution of
economic wealth and power by returning human rights to living persons.
Although the agenda is based on solid, conservative principles of individual
responsibility and local control, it does require a frontal assault on the
institutional and intellectual underpinnings of our present system of elite
privilege. One might for that reason expect a massive backlash against such
ideas from within the establishment. But although such a backlash must be
expected, the unanimity of the present power holders should not be assumed.
There is evidence of deep and growing concern among thoughtful corporate
leaders, bankers, and even economists, that they may be sitting atop an
increasingly unstable system on the brink of collapse.


p203


Seeds of a New Citizen-Led Politics


As we look to the formidable task ahead, we should remember that slavery was
once legal in the United States, as was discrimination based on race. There
was once a Roman Empire, later a Soviet Empire, a Berlin Wall, and until
recently, apartheid in South Africa. Corrupt and unjust regimes have a way of
falling once ordinary people decide their time has come.


In Silent Coup: Confronting the Big Business Takeover of Canada, Tony Clarke,
a leader of Canada's growing citizen movement against corporate rule, points
to the need to build a political movement that sets the end of corporate rule
as one of its top priorities. Corporate rule is the megaton gorilla in the
middle of the room that most discussions of political and economic failure
have too long avoided mentioning. Acknowledging the gorilla is an essential
step toward action.


The depth and seriousness of the massive dysfunctions of global corporations
and the contemporary capitalist economy have only recently gained prominence
in the public mind. Already, new initiatives are emerging that draw attention
to the need for serious structural mechanisms to hold corporations
accountable to the public interest. Indeed, the seeds of a new popular
movement toward serious reform are emerging from across the political
spectrum. A few of those centered in the United States are mentioned in the
following paragraphs. They merit broad and enthusiastic public support from
those who are seeking ways to participate in the creation of a post-corporate
world.


The New Party, a grassroots citizen-led political party working under the
banner of "A Fair Economy. A Real Democracy. A New Party," is systematically
building a citizen-led politics around an agenda that centers on
strengthening the rights and capacities of people to self-organize
democratically in both political and economic affairs. It is racially
diverse; works m alliance with labor, community, environmental, feminist
student, gay, and lesbian groups; and is built around values rather than
personalities. Its strategy is to build political strength by winning local
elections while concentrating on problems that can be addressed at the local
level. It is taking a serious and systematic approach to building what ~t
hopes may one day become a new majority party. As of 1997, 152 of the 231
candidates it had supported in election contests had won their races Roughly
half of New Party candidates are women and more than a third are people of
color.


A former corporate executive and staunch Republican who held a number of
high-level appointments in the Reagan and Bush administrations, Robert Monks
has for some years been organizing retirement and other investment funds to
exercise their shareholder voting rights to oust and replace complacent
managers who take more interest in increasing their personal compensation and
entitlements than producing returns for shareholders. Now he is taking on the
larger issue of the corporation's social performance. Monks believes that
pension funds are the key to increasing corporate responsibility, because
they serve a broad clientele with a long-term interest in the health of
society as well as the health of the corporations in which their money is
invested. He is thus organizing pension funds to take the lead in advancing
shareholder resolutions holding corporate executives accountable to
shareholders for (1) obeying the law; (2) fully disclosing in their financial
reporting what they know or strongly suspect regarding the costs imposed by
their firms on the function of society; and (3) minimizing their involvement
in political processes. These ideas are radical only in the extent to which
they depart from current practice. Ideally, his proposals will become a
centerpiece of the socially-responsible-investing movement.


The Politics of Meaning is a grassroots nonparty political movement with
chapters in ten major U.S. cities promoting a value-oriented politics based
on ideas articulated by Michael Lerner, editor and publisher of Tikkun
magazine, and lawyer and educator Peter Gabel. It has announced two major
initiatives to increase the integrity of economic life. The first is a model
resolution for adoption by city, county, and state governments committing
them to take into account the history of social responsibility of
corporations, as measured by an "Ethical Impact Report," in awarding public
contracts. Its second initiative is a proposed "Social Responsibility
Amendment" to the U.S. Constitution. It would require every corporation with
annual revenues of $20 million or more to apply for renewal of its charter
every twenty years. To secure its charter renewal, the corporation would be
required to "prove that it serves the common good, gives its workers
substantial power to shape their own conditions of work, and has a history of
social responsibility to the communities in which it operates, sells goods,
and/or advertises." Each five years the corporation would have to prepare and
make public an Ethical Impact Report with one section prepared by management,
another by its employees, and another representing community stakeholders.


The Alliance for Democracy is a progressive populist movement with forty-nine
local chapters around the United States. Following in the footsteps of the
populist movement of the late 1800s, it aims to provide a vehicle for citizen
action to end government-corporate collusion against the public interest and
expose the antidemocratic nature of rule by global capital. The Alliance is
carrying out long-term citizen education on issues of corporate governance
and campaigning for legislative action to increase corporate accountability.
It is considering a campaign in support of an amendment to the U.S.
Constitution to establish that corporations are not persons and not entitled
to the rights thereof. Related efforts center on redefining the processes and
requirements for corporate chartering and charter revocation. The Alliance is
also drafting a model international treaty on the responsibilities of
international investors as an alternative to corporate-sponsored agreements
aimed at freeing global investors from regulatory restraint.


The international NGO Taskforce on Business and Industry, under the
leadership of Jeff Barber of the Integrative Strategies Forum, is a citizens'
alliance that functions within the framework of the United Nations Commission
on Sustainable Development. It is working to counter initiatives from the
corporate sector aimed at keeping issues of corporate accountability off the
U.N. agenda. The Taskforce is also helping make visible within the U.N.
system the consistent failure of voluntary codes of corporate conduct.


The Program on Corporations, Law, and Democracy (POCLAD), a national alliance
of individuals concerned with corporate rights co-directed by Richard
Grossman and Ward Morehouse, is spearheading a campaign to restore the
concept that corporate charters are limited and revocable and to pursue a
wide range of legal initiatives intended to restrict corporate rights and
increase corporate accountability.


These and related initiatives too numerous to list are still new and small.
Each, however, is growing in size and momentum, carried forward by the
concern and commitment of citizens who are fed up with political corruption
and the abuse of corporate power. The most prominent barrier to turning the
widespread disgust into a powerful political movement is the lack of credible
and well-articulated alternatives and of an awakening to the belief that
change is possible.


Those to whom a living-world politics offers potential appeal come from all
classes and segments of society: working people concerned with job security,
respect, and honest pay for honest work; religious groups seeking to bring
moral values back into everyday life; members of the women's movement
concerned with equity and the balancing of work with family and community
life; minority group members who advocate a political and economic agenda
that meets the needs of all; members of environmental groups working to
restore and protect the health of living systems; peace and human rights
groups concerned with equity and the possibility of replacing global
competition with global cooperation.


Other constituents for change include small business owners and managers
struggling to survive as the backbone of community economies; the growing
ranks of ecological economists who are providing intellectual leadership in
challenging the hegemony of neoliberal economists; heads of business seeking
to make business more responsible and humane; socially responsible investors,
community bankers, community development foundation leaders; and the members
of groups such as the Social Ventures Network, Business for Social
Responsibility, and the World Business Academy.


Then there are the downsized whom capitalism has discarded and the
disaffected who remain within the corporate establishment while longing for
alternatives. There are the retired executives who know the system from the
inside and are deeply concerned for the future they leave their children.
There are the youth who are rightly concerned about their own futures. There
are the journalists concerned that the integrity of their profession suffers
from concentrated corporate control of the media. There are the teachers
concerned about the integrity of the educational process as corporate
advertising and propaganda infiltrate the classroom. There are the farming
households that are committed to stewardship of the earth and the production
of healthful foods.


The goals of stakeholder ownership and individual responsibility affirm the
values of conservatives. The emphasis on one person, one vote democracy and
the recognition of government's dear and necessary role affirm the values of
political liberals. It all adds up to a substantial and potentially
unstoppable constituency behind the politics of a post-corporate world.


***
p207
There is no more powerful expression of a society's values than its economic
institutions. In our case, we have created an economy that values money over
all else, embraces inequality as if it were a virtue, and is ruthlessly
destructive of life. The tragedy is that for most of us the values o global
capitalism are not our values.



------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Post-Corporate World


Index of Website
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