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Inclusive capitalism

Inclusive capitalism is a theoretical concept and policy movement that seeks to address the growing income and wealth inequality within Western capitalism following the financial crisis of 2007–2008.[citation needed]

Semantic interpretation edit

Inclusive capitalism is a term composed of two complementary meanings. The first one is that poverty is a significant, systemic problem in countries which have already embraced or are transitioning towards capitalistic economies. The second one is that companies and non-governmental organizations can sell goods and services to low-income people, which may lead to targeted poverty alleviation strategies, including improving people's nutrition, health care, education, employment and environment, but not their political power.

Philosophical origin edit

Inclusive capitalism originates with philosophical questions that predate modern day capitalism.[citation needed] These questions regard people's motivation. Are people motivated by what is best for their own self-interest, for the good of society or perhaps somewhere in between? Different philosophers have advanced their own ideas about these questions, including Thomas Hobbes. Hobbes thought "[m]an was motivated by his appetites, desires, fear and self-interest, seeking pleasure and avoiding pain. [...] His main desire, and the most important of natural laws, was self-preservation and the avoidance of death".[1] Hobbes’ assertion would become the foundation for capitalism, which espouses an exclusive rather than inclusive nature of people.[citation needed]

Hobbes' ideas influenced Adam Smith who thought governments should not repress people's self-interest in the economy, but "Smith never suggests that they [people] are motivated only by self-interest; he simply states that self-interest motivates more powerfully and consistently than kindness, altruism, or martyrdom".[2] In the 17th and 18th centuries notions of morality (theology) and value (economics) separate, leading Smith to advance a new theory of value based on divisions of labor rather than value being defined in a religious context of working for God.[3] For Smith "value cannot be measured by money, because sometimes money is artificially scarce [...] because all labor is of equal value to the worker, labor is the best measure of value".[4] Thus the concept of capitalism is rooted in an idea of human nature being inherently self-interested and the value of goods and services are derived from labor.[citation needed]

Karl Marx critiqued capitalism by analyzing the division of labor in Europe from an historical perspective. He argued that people's human nature, more specifically their ideas "were largely a product of class, economic structures and social positions. Ideas justified or rationalized the economic structure at any one time – they did not cause that structure".[5] Marx concluded that the division of labor contributes to perpetual inequality between the masses of low-income workers (proletariat) whose numbers are far greater and wealth far less than the minority and more powerful upper class (bourgeoisie) who are often politicians and business owners.[6] Marx's historical perspective focused on the role of politics in contributing towards and legitimizing modes of production that created separate socioeconomic classes.

According to Marx, "[t]he division of labour inside a nation leads at first to the separation of industrial and commercial from agricultural labor, and hence to the separation of town and country and to conflict of their interests".[7] The term town in this sense can be understood as the centers of political power and economic decision-making and the people who live in towns possess comparatively more power than those working in the countryside. According to Marx, those with the most power are included in the benefits of capitalism and those with less power are excluded from such benefits.

Karl Polanyi used a more cross-cultural approach to understanding different types of economies, including those based on capitalism. He began by describing the term "economic" as a combination of two separate meanings. The first is a "substantive meaning" that refers to the relationship humans have with one another and to the earth. The second is a "formal meaning" that deals with a "means-ends relationship" which focuses on economizing one's means to maximize one's ends (a "logical" and mechanistic understanding of what it means to be a human and participate in an economy).[8] Polanyi charts how reciprocity, redistribution and exchange have been conducted in different cultures across time.[9] Polanyi concluded that in some cultures economic transactions involve deep human relationships and rely on decision-making for environmental preservation and social cohesion. In others cultures, economies serve more of a function or utility of increasing capital where transactions are based less on the aim of social cohesion and environmental well being.[citation needed] The contemporary use of the term “inclusive capitalism” arises from the historical understanding of the essence of human nature and its role in economic decision-making.[citation needed]

Contemporary understanding edit

Robert Ashford argues that the concept of inclusive capitalism is rooted in the postulates of the binary economics.[10][11]

It is inconclusive who coined the term inclusive capitalism. Using different electronic databases to query this term, e.g. JSTOR, OCLC Academic, Web of Science, Google Scholar, etc., a Google Book search identified one of the oldest occurrences of the term appears in a 1943 Urban Land Institute publication, Urban Land (1943).[12][original research?] Two scholars popularized the term individually and through collaborative publications, C. K. Prahalad, the Paul and Ruth McCracken Distinguished University Professor of Strategy of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan—Ross, and Allen Hammond, a vice president of Special Projects and Innovation at the World Resources Institute.[citation needed]

Prahalad opens his 2005 book The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating Poverty Through Profits by asking “Why can’t we create inclusive capitalism”.[13] He uses the term “inclusive capitalism” to invite readers to focus on underserved consumers and markets in order to create opportunity for all.[14]

Among Hammond's earliest publications that discusses the exclusiveness of capitalism is a 2001 article titled Digitally Empowered Development published in the journal Foreign Affairs.[15] In the article, Hammond describes how technology in the 1990s has led many people to experience greater wealth and allowed for their overall quality of life to improve. He also notes that billions of people continue to live in poverty in countries developing their capitalistic society. In order to address this exclusiveness of capitalism a new capitalistic model should be used, argues Hammond. “What is needed instead is a bottom-up model that makes credit, communications, information, energy sources, and other self-help tools […] The idea behind this new development model is that basic services should generally be provided by businesses -- sometimes directly, sometimes in partnership with governments or networks of non-governmental organizations (NGOs)”.[16]

Prahalad and Hammond co-published a 2002 article in the Harvard Business Review that advanced their ideas of using market-based solutions for poverty alleviation through a hypothetical case study of development in India.[17] In 2004, they advanced their ideas in another co-authored publication, this time highlighting three misconceptions of poor people commonly held by companies. The first is that poor people have little buying power.[18] The second is that low-income people do not like change when in fact they often receive little opportunity to choose among a variety of products and services. The third is little money can be made by selling to the poor. The “world's poor-families with an annual household income of less than $6,000-is enormous. The 18 largest emerging and transition countries include 680 million such households, with a total annual income of $1.7 trillion-roughly equal to Germany's annual gross domestic product”.[19]

Implementation edit

In 2012, the Henry Jackson Society created a task force for Inclusive Capitalism Initiative project in order to start a transatlantic conversation about the growing income inequalities and their threat to the capitalist system.[20]

In 2014, Conference on Inclusive Capitalism, co-hosted by the City of London and E. L. Rothschild holding company, was held in London where the concept of inclusive capitalism was discussed as a practical measure.[21] At another conference in 2015 the "Pathway to Action" was brainstormed.[22] In the same 2015 year, the Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism was registered in the United States as a not-for-profit organization.[23] Lynn Forester de Rothschild became the founding CEO of the Coalition. At the 2016 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism in New York City, participants expressed commitment to promote inclusive economic growth.[24] Members of the Coalition expressed a belief that all stakeholders, including business and society, should be engaged in the enactment of an inclusive capitalism agenda[25][26]

In 2019, the Embankment Project for Inclusive Capitalism (EPIC) undertaken by the Coalition together with Ernst & Young reported its findings in a white paper. It was a pioneering effort to "develop a framework and identify meaningful metrics to report on long-term and inclusive value creation activities that heretofore have not been captured on traditional financial statements".[27]

In 2020, the Council for Inclusive Capitalism, a partnership of the Coalition with the Vatican, was created.[28][29][30]

Some pundits express optimism that it is possible to remake capitalism in a more inclusive and responsible way.[31]

Criticism edit

A critique of the ideas behind inclusive capitalism begins where Hammond and Prahalad end. Inclusive capitalism as used by Hammond and Prahalad divorces political power from economic empowerment. It is not concerned with improving poor people's political condition, allowing those in poverty to have greater political control and representation in government. It does not endorse macroeconomic changes through government policies that ensure higher wages, equitable access to housing, education, nutrition and health care across socioeconomic classes, particularly for poor people. Inclusive capitalism maintains political accountability in contributing to poverty is limited to not doing enough to encourage private enterprise (1) to create more jobs for low-income people; (2) to allow poor people access to financial capital for entrepreneurialism, (3) to enable poor people the opportunity to purchase a variety of goods and services. No consideration is given to governments and companies that benefit from having low-income and poorly educated populations who provide necessary labor.[citation needed]

In 2007, Hammond and a team of researchers from the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank Group’s International Finance Corporation and the World Resource Institute concluded that poverty afflicts four billion people worldwide, many of whom are living in capitalistic countries or countries transitioning towards capitalism (Hammond et al. 2007). Poverty is defined as “those with incomes below $3,000 in local purchasing power” (Hammond et al. 2007:3). Based on this evidence, the lived experiences of most human beings is that they are living in countries practicing different degrees of capitalism, which has proven itself to be highly exclusive. The opening pages of the 2007 report by Hammond et al. reveal additional funding for the report came from Intel, Microsoft, Royal Dutch Shell and Visa International. This may suggest that crony capitalism and inclusive capitalism may have overlapping interests.

An alternative understanding of capitalism and how to make it more inclusive is offered by anthropologists, historians, medical and social workers, and sociologists.[32] These and other scientists use ethnography, economic data and political history to document intentional public policies supported by business interests to maintain the status quo of low-income populations. Governments and businesses collude to prevent low-income populations with access to affordable housing, health care, education and nutrition because they divert resources to maximizing profits from middle- and upper-income populations. Making capitalism more inclusive certainly includes Hammond's and Prahalad's suggestions of encouraging companies to sell goods to poor people at affordable prices. However, inclusive capitalism must address political considerations that maintain structural inequalities within any economy.

Hammond and Prahalad champion information and communication technologies (ICTs), such as cell phones, computers and the Internet as powerful tools for poverty alleviation. Ethnographic data from anthropologists and sociologists reveal widely available and affordable ICTs provide qualitative improvement in the lives of low-income people, but don't measurably improve their livelihood and wealth.[33][34] The research indicates that measurable improvement in poor people's lives is not likely to occur without comprehensive government policies that simultaneously encourage living wages, affordable housing, access to nutritious and low-cost food, high quality and inexpensive schooling, health care and public transportation. While these public policies may be delivered by businesses and NGOs, government oversight does not need to be removed for a more inclusive capitalist economy.

John Kay claims that most of the 21st-century businesses are already inclusive.[35]

Nafeez Ahmed describes the Inclusive Capitalism Initiative as a Trojan Horse assembled to pacify the coming global revolt against capitalism.[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Curtis, Michael (1981) The Great Political Theories Volume 1: A Comprehensive Selection of the Crucial Ideas in Political Philosophy from Plato and Aristotle to Locke and Montesquieu. New York: Avon Books, p. 327
  2. ^ Buchholz, Todd G. (1989) New Ideas from Dead Economists: An Introduction to Modern Economic Thought. New York, NY: Penguin Group., p. 21
  3. ^ Wilk and Cliggett. Economies and Cultures: Foundations of Economic Anthropology, 2007:50-51
  4. ^ Wilk and Cliggett. Economies and Cultures: Foundations of Economic Anthropology, 2007:51-52
  5. ^ Wilk and Cliggett 2007:97
  6. ^ Marx, Karl and Frederick Engels (1970). The German Ideology: Part One. New York: NY. International Publishers.
  7. ^ Marx, Karl and Frederick Engels (1970). The German Ideology: Part One. New York: NY. International Publishers:43
  8. ^ Polanyi, Karl (1957). The Economy as an Instituted Process, in Trade and Markets in the Early Empires: Economies in History and Theory. C. M. Arensberg and H. W. Pearson, eds. Glenco, IL: The Free Press, p. 243
  9. ^ Polanyi (1957):250-256
  10. ^ Robert Ashford. Why Working but Poor: The Need for Inclusive Capitalism, 49 Akron L. Rev. 507 (2016)
  11. ^ Professor Robert Ashford’s ‘Inclusive Capitalism’ Gains International Support, Syracuse University News, September 27, 2017
  12. ^ Urban Land (1943). Urban Land Institute. Electronic document. Accessed April 30, 2008.
  13. ^ Prahalad 2005:xv
  14. ^ Prahalad 2005:xvii
  15. ^ Hammond, Allen L. (2001) Digitally empowered development, Foreign Affairs 80(2):96.
  16. ^ Hammond 2001:98
  17. ^ Prahalad and Hammond, 2002
  18. ^ Hammond and Prahalad 2004:32
  19. ^ Hammond and Prahalad 2004:32
  20. ^ Towards a More Inclusive Capitalism. By the Henry Jackson Initiative for Inclusive Capitalism
  21. ^ A movement to restore trust in capitalism, September 27, 2016
  22. ^ Marsh, P., Dimson, E. and Staunton, M. Inclusive Capitalism: The Pathway to Action. Thoughts from the 2015 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism. London: Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism, 2015. ISBN 9780993379703
  23. ^ Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism
  24. ^ Global Private Sector Leaders Make Commitments to Investment and Business Practices That Stimulate Long-Term Value Creation at the 2016 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism in New York City, Business Wire, October 10, 2016
  25. ^ Paul Thanos. American Inclusive Capitalism: An Agenda for a New Business Activism, Wilson Center, April 26, 2017
  26. ^ Actions to Achieve Inclusive Capitalism Mark Weinberger, EY CEO
  27. ^ The Embankment Project for Inclusive Capitalism (“EPIC”): A Better Way to Value the American Worker, Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism, 2019.
  28. ^ Jack Kelly. Pope Francis Partners With Corporate Titans To Make Capitalism More Inclusive And Fair: Is This For Real Or Just Corporate Virtue Signaling?, Forbes, December 9, 2020
  29. ^ Council for Inclusive Capitalism launches partnership with Vatican, Angelusnews.com, December 9, 2020
  30. ^ Anne Quito. Pope Francis is backing a new movement to redefine capitalism as a force for good, Quartz Media, December 8, 2020
  31. ^ Nigel Wilson. Inclusive Capitalism: Oxymoron or The Perfect Balance?, Forbes, July 29, 2018
  32. ^ Davis (2006), Farmer 2003, Goode and Maskovsky 2001, O’Connor (2001), and Yelvington (1995)
  33. ^ Slater, Don and Jo Tacchi (2004). ICT Innovations for Poverty Alleviation. New Delhi: UNESCO.
  34. ^ Horst, Heather A., and Daniel Miller (2006). The Cell Phone: An Anthropology of Communication. Oxford: Berg.
  35. ^ Moving Beyond “Capitalism”, March 13, 2018
  36. ^ Nafeez Ahmed. Inclusive Capitalism Initiative is Trojan Horse to quell coming global revolt: Henry Jackson Society's pre-emptive PR offensive seeks to popularise parasitic economic growth for the few, The Guardian, 28 May 2014

Further reading edit

  • Farmer, Paul (2003). Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  • Goode, Judith, and Jeff Maskovsky (2001). The New Poverty Studies: The Ethnography of Power, Politics, and Impoverished People in the United States. New York: New York University Press.
  • Hammond, Allen L. and C. K. Prahalad (2004). Selling to the Poor, Foreign Policy, 142:30-37.
  • Hammond, Allen L., William J. Kramer, Robert S. Katz, Julia T. Tran, Courtland Walker (2007). The Next 4 Billion: Market Size and Business Strategy at the Base of the Pyramid 2008-04-15 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed April 25, 2008.
  • O'Connor, Alice (2001). Poverty Knowledge: Social Science, Social Policy, and the Poor in Twentieth-Century U.S. History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Prahalad, C. K. and, Allen Hammond (2002). Serving the world's poor, profitably, Harvard Business Review, 80(9):48-58.
  • Yelvington, Kevin A. (1995). Producing Power: Ethnicity, Gender, and Class in a Caribbean Workplace. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

External links edit

  • Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism
  • Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism—Press
  • Inclusive Capitalism for the American Workforce: Reaping the Rewards of Economic Growth through Broad-based Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, Center for American Progress, 2011
  • The State and Direction of Inclusive Capitalism, Saïd Business School, Oxford University—Deloitte Consulting, LLP
  • David G. Green. Inclusive Capitalism: How we can make independence work for everyone, Civitas: Institute for the Study of Civil Society, 2017


inclusive, capitalism, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, cit. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Inclusive capitalism is a theoretical concept and policy movement that seeks to address the growing income and wealth inequality within Western capitalism following the financial crisis of 2007 2008 citation needed Contents 1 Semantic interpretation 2 Philosophical origin 3 Contemporary understanding 4 Implementation 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksSemantic interpretation editInclusive capitalism is a term composed of two complementary meanings The first one is that poverty is a significant systemic problem in countries which have already embraced or are transitioning towards capitalistic economies The second one is that companies and non governmental organizations can sell goods and services to low income people which may lead to targeted poverty alleviation strategies including improving people s nutrition health care education employment and environment but not their political power Philosophical origin editInclusive capitalism originates with philosophical questions that predate modern day capitalism citation needed These questions regard people s motivation Are people motivated by what is best for their own self interest for the good of society or perhaps somewhere in between Different philosophers have advanced their own ideas about these questions including Thomas Hobbes Hobbes thought m an was motivated by his appetites desires fear and self interest seeking pleasure and avoiding pain His main desire and the most important of natural laws was self preservation and the avoidance of death 1 Hobbes assertion would become the foundation for capitalism which espouses an exclusive rather than inclusive nature of people citation needed Hobbes ideas influenced Adam Smith who thought governments should not repress people s self interest in the economy but Smith never suggests that they people are motivated only by self interest he simply states that self interest motivates more powerfully and consistently than kindness altruism or martyrdom 2 In the 17th and 18th centuries notions of morality theology and value economics separate leading Smith to advance a new theory of value based on divisions of labor rather than value being defined in a religious context of working for God 3 For Smith value cannot be measured by money because sometimes money is artificially scarce because all labor is of equal value to the worker labor is the best measure of value 4 Thus the concept of capitalism is rooted in an idea of human nature being inherently self interested and the value of goods and services are derived from labor citation needed Karl Marx critiqued capitalism by analyzing the division of labor in Europe from an historical perspective He argued that people s human nature more specifically their ideas were largely a product of class economic structures and social positions Ideas justified or rationalized the economic structure at any one time they did not cause that structure 5 Marx concluded that the division of labor contributes to perpetual inequality between the masses of low income workers proletariat whose numbers are far greater and wealth far less than the minority and more powerful upper class bourgeoisie who are often politicians and business owners 6 Marx s historical perspective focused on the role of politics in contributing towards and legitimizing modes of production that created separate socioeconomic classes According to Marx t he division of labour inside a nation leads at first to the separation of industrial and commercial from agricultural labor and hence to the separation of town and country and to conflict of their interests 7 The term town in this sense can be understood as the centers of political power and economic decision making and the people who live in towns possess comparatively more power than those working in the countryside According to Marx those with the most power are included in the benefits of capitalism and those with less power are excluded from such benefits Karl Polanyi used a more cross cultural approach to understanding different types of economies including those based on capitalism He began by describing the term economic as a combination of two separate meanings The first is a substantive meaning that refers to the relationship humans have with one another and to the earth The second is a formal meaning that deals with a means ends relationship which focuses on economizing one s means to maximize one s ends a logical and mechanistic understanding of what it means to be a human and participate in an economy 8 Polanyi charts how reciprocity redistribution and exchange have been conducted in different cultures across time 9 Polanyi concluded that in some cultures economic transactions involve deep human relationships and rely on decision making for environmental preservation and social cohesion In others cultures economies serve more of a function or utility of increasing capital where transactions are based less on the aim of social cohesion and environmental well being citation needed The contemporary use of the term inclusive capitalism arises from the historical understanding of the essence of human nature and its role in economic decision making citation needed Contemporary understanding editRobert Ashford argues that the concept of inclusive capitalism is rooted in the postulates of the binary economics 10 11 It is inconclusive who coined the term inclusive capitalism Using different electronic databases to query this term e g JSTOR OCLC Academic Web of Science Google Scholar etc a Google Book search identified one of the oldest occurrences of the term appears in a 1943 Urban Land Institute publication Urban Land 1943 12 original research Two scholars popularized the term individually and through collaborative publications C K Prahalad the Paul and Ruth McCracken Distinguished University Professor of Strategy of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan Ross and Allen Hammond a vice president of Special Projects and Innovation at the World Resources Institute citation needed Prahalad opens his 2005 book The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid Eradicating Poverty Through Profits by asking Why can t we create inclusive capitalism 13 He uses the term inclusive capitalism to invite readers to focus on underserved consumers and markets in order to create opportunity for all 14 Among Hammond s earliest publications that discusses the exclusiveness of capitalism is a 2001 article titled Digitally Empowered Development published in the journal Foreign Affairs 15 In the article Hammond describes how technology in the 1990s has led many people to experience greater wealth and allowed for their overall quality of life to improve He also notes that billions of people continue to live in poverty in countries developing their capitalistic society In order to address this exclusiveness of capitalism a new capitalistic model should be used argues Hammond What is needed instead is a bottom up model that makes credit communications information energy sources and other self help tools The idea behind this new development model is that basic services should generally be provided by businesses sometimes directly sometimes in partnership with governments or networks of non governmental organizations NGOs 16 Prahalad and Hammond co published a 2002 article in the Harvard Business Review that advanced their ideas of using market based solutions for poverty alleviation through a hypothetical case study of development in India 17 In 2004 they advanced their ideas in another co authored publication this time highlighting three misconceptions of poor people commonly held by companies The first is that poor people have little buying power 18 The second is that low income people do not like change when in fact they often receive little opportunity to choose among a variety of products and services The third is little money can be made by selling to the poor The world s poor families with an annual household income of less than 6 000 is enormous The 18 largest emerging and transition countries include 680 million such households with a total annual income of 1 7 trillion roughly equal to Germany s annual gross domestic product 19 Implementation editIn 2012 the Henry Jackson Society created a task force for Inclusive Capitalism Initiative project in order to start a transatlantic conversation about the growing income inequalities and their threat to the capitalist system 20 In 2014 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism co hosted by the City of London and E L Rothschild holding company was held in London where the concept of inclusive capitalism was discussed as a practical measure 21 At another conference in 2015 the Pathway to Action was brainstormed 22 In the same 2015 year the Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism was registered in the United States as a not for profit organization 23 Lynn Forester de Rothschild became the founding CEO of the Coalition At the 2016 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism in New York City participants expressed commitment to promote inclusive economic growth 24 Members of the Coalition expressed a belief that all stakeholders including business and society should be engaged in the enactment of an inclusive capitalism agenda 25 26 In 2019 the Embankment Project for Inclusive Capitalism EPIC undertaken by the Coalition together with Ernst amp Young reported its findings in a white paper It was a pioneering effort to develop a framework and identify meaningful metrics to report on long term and inclusive value creation activities that heretofore have not been captured on traditional financial statements 27 In 2020 the Council for Inclusive Capitalism a partnership of the Coalition with the Vatican was created 28 29 30 Some pundits express optimism that it is possible to remake capitalism in a more inclusive and responsible way 31 Criticism editA critique of the ideas behind inclusive capitalism begins where Hammond and Prahalad end Inclusive capitalism as used by Hammond and Prahalad divorces political power from economic empowerment It is not concerned with improving poor people s political condition allowing those in poverty to have greater political control and representation in government It does not endorse macroeconomic changes through government policies that ensure higher wages equitable access to housing education nutrition and health care across socioeconomic classes particularly for poor people Inclusive capitalism maintains political accountability in contributing to poverty is limited to not doing enough to encourage private enterprise 1 to create more jobs for low income people 2 to allow poor people access to financial capital for entrepreneurialism 3 to enable poor people the opportunity to purchase a variety of goods and services No consideration is given to governments and companies that benefit from having low income and poorly educated populations who provide necessary labor citation needed In 2007 Hammond and a team of researchers from the Inter American Development Bank the World Bank Group s International Finance Corporation and the World Resource Institute concluded that poverty afflicts four billion people worldwide many of whom are living in capitalistic countries or countries transitioning towards capitalism Hammond et al 2007 Poverty is defined as those with incomes below 3 000 in local purchasing power Hammond et al 2007 3 Based on this evidence the lived experiences of most human beings is that they are living in countries practicing different degrees of capitalism which has proven itself to be highly exclusive The opening pages of the 2007 report by Hammond et al reveal additional funding for the report came from Intel Microsoft Royal Dutch Shell and Visa International This may suggest that crony capitalism and inclusive capitalism may have overlapping interests An alternative understanding of capitalism and how to make it more inclusive is offered by anthropologists historians medical and social workers and sociologists 32 These and other scientists use ethnography economic data and political history to document intentional public policies supported by business interests to maintain the status quo of low income populations Governments and businesses collude to prevent low income populations with access to affordable housing health care education and nutrition because they divert resources to maximizing profits from middle and upper income populations Making capitalism more inclusive certainly includes Hammond s and Prahalad s suggestions of encouraging companies to sell goods to poor people at affordable prices However inclusive capitalism must address political considerations that maintain structural inequalities within any economy Hammond and Prahalad champion information and communication technologies ICTs such as cell phones computers and the Internet as powerful tools for poverty alleviation Ethnographic data from anthropologists and sociologists reveal widely available and affordable ICTs provide qualitative improvement in the lives of low income people but don t measurably improve their livelihood and wealth 33 34 The research indicates that measurable improvement in poor people s lives is not likely to occur without comprehensive government policies that simultaneously encourage living wages affordable housing access to nutritious and low cost food high quality and inexpensive schooling health care and public transportation While these public policies may be delivered by businesses and NGOs government oversight does not need to be removed for a more inclusive capitalist economy John Kay claims that most of the 21st century businesses are already inclusive 35 Nafeez Ahmed describes the Inclusive Capitalism Initiative as a Trojan Horse assembled to pacify the coming global revolt against capitalism 36 See also editProgressive capitalism Community capitalism Neo Capitalism Binary economics Humanistic capitalism Inclusive growth Creating shared value Corporate social responsibility RedwashingReferences edit Curtis Michael 1981 The Great Political Theories Volume 1 A Comprehensive Selection of the Crucial Ideas in Political Philosophy from Plato and Aristotle to Locke and Montesquieu New York Avon Books p 327 Buchholz Todd G 1989 New Ideas from Dead Economists An Introduction to Modern Economic Thought New York NY Penguin Group p 21 Wilk and Cliggett Economies and Cultures Foundations of Economic Anthropology 2007 50 51 Wilk and Cliggett Economies and Cultures Foundations of Economic Anthropology 2007 51 52 Wilk and Cliggett 2007 97 Marx Karl and Frederick Engels 1970 The German Ideology Part One New York NY International Publishers Marx Karl and Frederick Engels 1970 The German Ideology Part One New York NY International Publishers 43 Polanyi Karl 1957 The Economy as an Instituted Process in Trade and Markets in the Early Empires Economies in History and Theory C M Arensberg and H W Pearson eds Glenco IL The Free Press p 243 Polanyi 1957 250 256 Robert Ashford Why Working but Poor The Need for Inclusive Capitalism 49 Akron L Rev 507 2016 Professor Robert Ashford s Inclusive Capitalism Gains International Support Syracuse University News September 27 2017 Urban Land 1943 Urban Land Institute Electronic document Accessed April 30 2008 Prahalad 2005 xv Prahalad 2005 xvii Hammond Allen L 2001 Digitally empowered development Foreign Affairs 80 2 96 Hammond 2001 98 Prahalad and Hammond 2002 Hammond and Prahalad 2004 32 Hammond and Prahalad 2004 32 Towards a More Inclusive Capitalism By the Henry Jackson Initiative for Inclusive Capitalism A movement to restore trust in capitalism September 27 2016 Marsh P Dimson E and Staunton M Inclusive Capitalism The Pathway to Action Thoughts from the 2015 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism London Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism 2015 ISBN 9780993379703 Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism Global Private Sector Leaders Make Commitments to Investment and Business Practices That Stimulate Long Term Value Creation at the 2016 Conference on Inclusive Capitalism in New York City Business Wire October 10 2016 Paul Thanos American Inclusive Capitalism An Agenda for a New Business Activism Wilson Center April 26 2017 Actions to Achieve Inclusive Capitalism Mark Weinberger EY CEO The Embankment Project for Inclusive Capitalism EPIC A Better Way to Value the American Worker Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism 2019 Jack Kelly Pope Francis Partners With Corporate Titans To Make Capitalism More Inclusive And Fair Is This For Real Or Just Corporate Virtue Signaling Forbes December 9 2020 Council for Inclusive Capitalism launches partnership with Vatican Angelusnews com December 9 2020 Anne Quito Pope Francis is backing a new movement to redefine capitalism as a force for good Quartz Media December 8 2020 Nigel Wilson Inclusive Capitalism Oxymoron or The Perfect Balance Forbes July 29 2018 Davis 2006 Farmer 2003 Goode and Maskovsky 2001 O Connor 2001 and Yelvington 1995 Slater Don and Jo Tacchi 2004 ICT Innovations for Poverty Alleviation New Delhi UNESCO Horst Heather A and Daniel Miller 2006 The Cell Phone An Anthropology of Communication Oxford Berg Moving Beyond Capitalism March 13 2018 Nafeez Ahmed Inclusive Capitalism Initiative is Trojan Horse to quell coming global revolt Henry Jackson Society s pre emptive PR offensive seeks to popularise parasitic economic growth for the few The Guardian 28 May 2014Further reading editFarmer Paul 2003 Pathologies of Power Health Human Rights and the New War on the Poor Berkeley CA University of California Press Goode Judith and Jeff Maskovsky 2001 The New Poverty Studies The Ethnography of Power Politics and Impoverished People in the United States New York New York University Press Hammond Allen L and C K Prahalad 2004 Selling to the Poor Foreign Policy 142 30 37 Hammond Allen L William J Kramer Robert S Katz Julia T Tran Courtland Walker 2007 The Next 4 Billion Market Size and Business Strategy at the Base of the Pyramid Archived 2008 04 15 at the Wayback Machine Accessed April 25 2008 O Connor Alice 2001 Poverty Knowledge Social Science Social Policy and the Poor in Twentieth Century U S History Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Prahalad C K and Allen Hammond 2002 Serving the world s poor profitably Harvard Business Review 80 9 48 58 Yelvington Kevin A 1995 Producing Power Ethnicity Gender and Class in a Caribbean Workplace Philadelphia Temple University Press External links editCoalition for Inclusive Capitalism Coalition for Inclusive Capitalism Press Inclusive Capitalism for the American Workforce Reaping the Rewards of Economic Growth through Broad based Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing Center for American Progress 2011 The State and Direction of Inclusive Capitalism Said Business School Oxford University Deloitte Consulting LLP David G Green Inclusive Capitalism How we can make independence work for everyone Civitas Institute for the Study of Civil Society 2017 Portals nbsp Companies nbsp Capitalism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inclusive capitalism amp oldid 1183343060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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