A recent article in The Economist pointed out that Britain, the original industrialiser for long in relative economic decline, owned 45% of the world’s foreign direct investment in 1914, but now has substantially less than 10%. The United States’ foreign direct investment peaked at around 50% in 1967 and is now less than half that. [...]
Posted on November 22, 2010, 12:32 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Bank Bonuses,
Climate Change,
Economic Theory,
Protectionaism,
Resource Depletion,
Unemployment,
free trade ideology.
The desire to return to business as usual isn’t restricted to the obscenity of bankers’ bonuses. That same desire is shared by unemployed potters in Stoke on Trent, car workers in Detroit, and the governing politicians in London and Washington who are presiding over their people’s misery.
However, for the millions in China’s (not [...]
Posted on November 6, 2010, 11:01 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Shareholder Value,
Stakeholder theory.
The idea that companies, if not all economic activity, exists to maximise the wealth of shareholders or owners, dominates the world of corporate governance and much else. Bankers and traders believe it. Industrial managers have been led to accept it. Universities and business schools preach it. It is part of the free market ideology, often [...]
Posted on November 2, 2010, 12:14 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Corporate Governance,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Practice,
Management Theory,
Political Decision,
Regulation.
As Nobel laureate Paul Krugman pointed out ‘a country is not a business’. So why, he asked, do politicians think it is sensible to ask a successful businessman for advice on running the country? Why, for example, is David Cameron asking Sir Philip Green for his input? His views are clear and predictable, and of [...]
Posted on October 24, 2010, 11:57 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Practice,
Political Decision,
Public Sector.
Before the British coalition government’s proposed cuts were announced they were greeted by 39 top business people writing to the Daily Telegraph confirming that they would create the necessary jobs so as to make the public sector cuts work. That way tax rises might be avoided and long-term cuts in public sector activity achieved. For [...]