What a load of wishful thinking!

The only way that the public debt can be reduced is by impoverishing those that 
hold the debt - the rentier class, and there is no recognition of this. The 
assets of the rentiers and the liabilities of the state are two sides of the 
same coin, unless debts are either cancelled, inflated away or the rentier 
assets are taxed, there is no way out.



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14972015

22 September 2011 Last updated at 19:06 ET
Has Western capitalism failed?

Twenty years ago, the fall of communism in Eastern Europe seemed
to prove the triumph of capitalism. But was that an illusion?
Constant shocks to the world's financial system over the past few
years prompted the BBC World Service's Business Daily programme to
ask leading figures whether they thought Western capitalism had
failed.

by Angel Gurria: Secretary General, Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD)

My answer to this question would be no. But I also wonder whether
capitalism should be answering to the prosecution.

We failed as regulators, we failed as supervisors, we failed as
corporate governance managers, we failed as risk managers, and we
also failed in the allocation of roles and responsibilities for
international economic organisations.

Some international organisations saw the crisis coming. Some even
managed to put out some warnings, but they did not co-ordinate
their assessments, they did not speak with one strong voice.

Thus, they were ignored in an atmosphere of great prosperity where
everybody was making a lot of money and everybody thought that
innovation was the name of the game - and by warning that
something could go wrong, you would look like you were holding
progress back.

There was also the philosophy that markets needed to function with
the least possible government intervention. But that did not mean
that they could work without any intervention at all, nor did it
necessarily mean that the intervention could be such a light touch
that you were not able to identify risks.

So the crisis left a dire legacy. A legacy of high unemployment,
enormous fiscal deficits which we are still struggling to control,
and an accumulated public debt which has already reached 100% of
GDP on average in the OECD countries.

It is very important to send clear signals of how we are going to
address this debt problem without sacrificing growth and employment.

Reforms to product and labour markets, education, innovation,
green growth, competition, taxes, health - they are the things
that should be the object of our primary focus in the context of a
long-term strategy to restore sustained growth.

This will create jobs and help to tackle debt.

We also need to "go social" and focus on innovative policies to
protect the most vulnerable.


Ken Ofori Atta: Executive chairman and co-founder of Databank
Financial Services (Ghana)

The 20 years prior to the recent credit crisis could be described
as capitalism as its best, with global wealth accelerating at ever
increasing rates.

Since 1990, when we left Wall Street and founded Databank to offer
the first investment banking services in Ghana, we were able to
capitalise significantly on the boom years,

We have also observed and embraced how some of that
capitalism-fuelled wealth has found its way into funding
education, innovation and creativity, all in pursuit of a better
life and hopefully a better world.

All too recently this notion was challenged. The spark that
ignited the crisis led to a conflagration of adverse effects.
These spread like a virus across North America, Europe and right
down into Asia.

While our counterparts dealing on the historically more developed
markets were taking increasing amounts of risk, employing
complicated financial instruments to make returns from
increasingly complex derivatives, Ghana - and Africa as a whole -
was focused largely on helping to fund a growth in enterprise.

We were not so widely exposed to toxic assets so we weathered the
storm well. And we did so employing the techniques the Databank
founders learnt on Wall Street: Western capitalism in its truest form.

 From this Ghanaian's perspective, no talk of capitalism could be
made without mentioning Dr JB Danquah, the father of this
philosophy in the then Gold Coast. Danquah's vision was to create
an environment in which individuals would be able to set up and
run enterprises that would in turn create wealth for themselves
and their households.

Citizens would therefore be in the position to acquire and own
properties that could be used as collateral for credit to enhance
their businesses and expand wealth to benefit more families.

This thesis not only allows many people to create wealth, but
stimulates initiatives, making people more independent for their
own good and also for the good of the nation.

What went awry among the frenzy for growth in more mature markets
was people losing sight of the fact that someone somewhere has to
work hard to make a market and build a business to create real
enduring value that goes beyond the bottom line.
Chandran Nair: Founder of Hong-Kong based think tank Global
Institute For Tomorrow (GIFT)

The extreme form of capitalism which has permeated the world,
particularly in the last 30-40 years, is in deep trouble and we
are in denial.

It is important to understand that fundamental principles of
capitalism - that human beings are rational and markets behave
rationally, and that markets will assign prices - are flawed.

It is also important to understand the roots of modern capitalism.

You could argue that slavery was the first attempt to under-price
resources. When slavery came to an end there was colonisation,
which was again an attempt by the capitalist model to use
resources cheaply. With the end of colonies, we had the
globalisation argument of economic growth and then the
globalisation of finance.

When I speak about this in Europe, they say there has been 30
years of over-leverage, but I say they should multiply that by 10
and look at 300 years of essentially exploited growth.

What we need to recognise now is that the world is a very
different place from what it was 100 years ago when we had one
billion people.

With a current population approaching seven billion, things will
have to change.

A fundamental issue that the world will have to recognise, and
which Western capitalism has conveniently ignored, is that the
goods and services which companies and economies seem to thrive on
are based on under-pricing resources and externalising costs.

That game is over and we need a fundamental restructuring -
essentially about how people will live, and we need to move beyond
simple notions about growth to more sophisticated, nuanced
discussions about human progress.

That is not the same as suggesting that economic growth will be
able to deliver i-toys and cars to everyone. This is not possible
and that is where capitalism has essentially hit a wall and a very
different conversation needs to take place.
------------------------------------------
Professor Tim Jackson: Author of Prosperity without Growth -
economics for a finite planet

Every society clings to a myth by which it lives.

Ours is the myth of economic growth. For the last five decades,
the pursuit of growth has been the single most important policy
goal across the world. The global economy is five times the size
it was half a century ago. If it continues to grow at the same
rate it will be 80 times that size by the year 2100.

This extraordinary ramping up of global economic activity is
without historical precedent. It is totally at odds with the
finite resource base and the fragile ecology on which we depend
for survival.

Most of the time, we avoid the stark reality of these numbers.
Growth must go on, we insist.

The reasons for this collective blindness are easy enough to find.

Western capitalism is structurally reliant on growth for its
stability. When growth falters - as it has done recently -
politicians panic. Businesses struggle to survive. People lose
their jobs and sometimes their homes.

Questioning growth is deemed to be the act of lunatics, idealists
and revolutionaries.

Yet question it we must. The myth of growth has failed us. It has
failed the two billion people who still live on less than $2 a
day. It has failed the fragile ecological systems on which we
depend for survival.

But economic crisis presents us with a unique opportunity to
invest in change. To sweep away the short-term thinking that has
plagued society for decades. To engage, for instance, in a radical
overhaul of dysfunctional capital markets.

Untrammelled speculation in commodities and financial derivatives
brought the financial world to the brink of collapse just three
years ago. It needs to be replaced by a longer, slower sense of
capital.

Fixing the economy is only part of the battle. We also have to
confront the convoluted logic of consumerism. The days of spending
money we do not have on things we do not need to impress people we
do not care about are over.

Living well is about good nutrition, decent homes, access to good
quality services, stable communities, satisfying employment.

Prosperity, in any meaningful sense of the word, transcends
material concerns. It resides in our love for our families, the
support of our friends, the strength of our communities, our
ability to participate fully in the life of society, a sense of
meaning and purpose in our lives.

Russian capitalism is somewhat old and in need of urgent repair,
but the spirit of capitalism - risk-taking, saving, investing,
hard work - all those virtues have now migrated and are happily
ensconced in China, India, Indonesia, Korea and Japan - the
countries which we never thought would ever get out of poverty.

Western capitalism probably had half a century of over-indulgence
- continued prosperity, full employment, almost guaranteed growth
- and that in its turn meant that our costs went up and
manufacturing industry migrated abroad, while finance has proved
to be a fickle friend.

We will have to rethink our model, our values, we will have to
acquire old-fashioned virtues, because capitalism is not going to
go any time fast.

If Asia has vigorous energetic capitalism and we have tired old
capitalism, we will end up paying a huge price and we will trade
our prosperity for their prosperity.

Socialism died 20 years ago - capitalism lives on.

It changes its form, it migrates, it is fully global. Now we at
last understand what globalisation means - it means we are just as
important as anyone else. If we don't work very hard, we will lose
our importance.

That is the lesson of the contemporary world.

Capitalism lives through crisis. That is how it renews and
invigorates itself.

For our bad luck, capitalism has renewed itself by migrating
eastwards. We are left with the debris and we have to do something
to get ourselves out this crisis but that will have to be in the
spirit of capitalism, not against it.
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